A Quick Word of Introduction: I originally wrote this piece back in March, submitting it to an online publication. Unfortunately, there seems to have been a major delay in the publishing of the next issue. Being infamously impatient, I have at last decided to publish this essay on my blog to share with my readers. I have made a few more-or-less minor revisions and have added images. In this piece, I tackle Edmund Wilson's infamous essay Who Cares Who Killed Roger Ackroyd? using all the tools Wilson used, particularly sarcasm. Throughout my analysis I will challenge the claim that this essay "destroyed" the typical Agatha Christie mystery by claiming the precise opposite: it is an entirely useless essay from a critical standpoint. And so, without further ado, I give you:
Who Cares Who Killed Roger Ackroyd? : The Smackdown
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Edmund Wilson, Professional Troll |
But why is it famous? As I recently discovered on a re-read,
Wilson’s essay contains literally nothing
of substance. He only proved one thing: Edmund Wilson did not like detective
stories. Which is a perfectly valid point of view. But Wilson did not
substantiate it even remotely. He simply looked down at the genre through the
eyes of a “true intellectual” and sniffed at it. In other words, Edmund Wilson
was a troll.