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Summary CRITICAL READING FOR THE MURER OF ROGER ACKROYD

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Summaries of critical essays of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd from an A-grade student Secure those top AO3/AO4 marks by including this extra analytical detail!

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Uploaded on
September 9, 2022
Number of pages
3
Written in
2022/2023
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Summary

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Wider Reading for Roger Ackroyd
- Very controversial and celebrated text
- . Christie admitted she got the idea for the ending from her brother-in-law,
James Watts, who mused on a detective novel in which the criminal turns
out to be the “Dr. Watson” character, referring to Watson’s position in Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes
- Willard Huntington Wright (essay) – ‘The trick played on the reader in The
Murder of Roger Ackroyd is hardly a legitimate device of the detective-
story writer.’
- Christie’s ending considered a mutilation of the detective story genre –
certain truths – of brilliant detective and narrator – are expected to be able
to be taken for granted.


Themes
- Triumph of Good and Restoration of Order

- Key feature of detective fiction involves satisfying restoration of order.
- E.g Sherlock Holmes - the reader has no doubt that Holmes will solve the
case even before finishing the first chapter – it is simply the pattern of the
genre.
- Christie also leans into this genre in TMORA – reader knows Poirot will
solve the case because Sheppard, writing after the fact, repeatedly
reminds the reader that Poirot has already done so.
- The question isn’t if order will be restored, simply how.


- "Murder of Manners"


- Christie’s novel is set in the polite, “civilized” upper- and middle-class
world of Britain in the first half of the 20th century - unlike other gruesome
detective stories.
- Her characters retain their manners and civility throughout.
- No violence/gore - novel primarily features characters having civilized
discussions.
- The rules of middle- and upper-class England are rigidly applied to all
characters, who behave with restraint and courtesy throughout.
- Despite this civility, murder is still the central intrigue of the novel, and
blackmail, lies, and secrets abound.


- Nature vs. Nurture in Creating a Criminal

- End of Chapter 17 – Poirot’s allegorical story about a weak man when
provoked in just the right way, is moved to commit a crime. The novel
seems to suggest It is the precise combination of a weak character and
the right circumstances (both nature and nurture).

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