Articlesclick.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
Articlesclick.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Humanities

The Columnist in the Mousetrap

Author : Sam Vaknin
I am a voracious reader of the most convoluted and lexiphanic texts - yet, there is one author I prefer to most. She gives me the greatest pleasure and leaves me tranquil and craving for more when I am through devouring one of her countless tomes. A philosopher of the mundane, a scholar of death, an exquisite chronicler of decay and decadence - she is Dame Agatha Christie. I spend as much time wondering what so mesmerizes me in her pulp fiction as I do trying to decipher her deliciously contorted stratagems.



First, there is the claustrophobia. Modernity revolves around the rapid depletion of our personal spaces - from pastures and manors to cubicles and studio apartments. Christie - like Edgar Ellen Poe before her - imbues even the most confined rooms with endless opportunities for vice and malice, where countless potential scenarios can and do unfold kaleidoscopically. A Universe of plots and countervailing subplots which permeate even the most cramped of her locations. It is nothing short of consummate magic.



Then there is the realization of the ubiquity of our pathologies. In Christie's masterpieces, even the champions of good are paragons of mental illness. Hercules Poirot, the quintessential narcissist, self-grooming, haughty, and delusional. Miss Marple, a schizoid busybody, who savors neither human company, nor her inevitable encounters with an intruding world. Indeed, it is deformity that gifts these two with their eerily penetrating insights into the infirmities of others.



Then, there is the death of innocence. Dame Agatha's detective novels are quaint, set in a Ruritanian Britain that is no more and likely had never existed. Technologies make their debut: the car, the telephone, the radio, electric light. The very nature of evil is transformed from the puerile directness of the highway robber and the passion killer - to the scheming, cunning, and disguised automatism of her villains. Crime in her books is calculated, the outcome of plotting and conspiring, a confluence of unbridled and corrupted appetites and a malignant mutation of individualism. Her opus is a portrait of our age as it emerged, all bloodied and repellent, from the womb the dying Victorian era.



Christie's weapons of choice are simple - the surreptitious poison, a stealthy dagger, the cocked revolver, a hideous drowning. Some acquaintance with the sciences of Chemistry and Physics is indispensable, of course. Archeology comes third. But Christie's main concerns are human nature and morality. The riddles that she so fiendishly posits cannot be solved without taking both into account.



As Miss Marple keeps insisting throughout her numerous adventures, people are the same everywhere, regardless of their social standing, wealth, or upbringing. The foibles, motives, and likely actions of protagonists - criminals as well as victims - are inferred by Marple from character studies of her village folks back home. Human nature is immutable and universal is Christie's message.



Not so morality. Formal justice is a slippery concept, often opposed to the natural sort. Life is in shades of gray. Murders sometimes are justified, especially when they serve to rectify past wrongs or prevent a greater evil. Some victims had it coming. Crime is part of a cycle of karmic retribution. The detective's role is to restore order to a chaotic situation, to interpret reality for us (in an inevitable final chapter), and to administer true and impartial justice, not shackled by social or legalistic norms.



Thus, nothing is as it seems.



It is perhaps Christie's greatest allure. Beneath the polished, petite-bourgeois, rule-driven, surface, lurks another world, replete with demons and with angels, volcanic passions and stochastic drives, the mirrors and the mirrored, where no ratio rules and no laws obtain. Catapulted into this nightmarish, surrealistic landscape, like the survivors of a shipwreck, we wander, bedazzled, readers and detectives, heroes and villains, damsels and their lovers, doomed to await the denouement. When that moment comes, redeemed by reason, we emerge, reassured, into our reinstated, ordered, Before Christ(ie) existence.



Her novels are the substance of our dreams, woven from the fabric of our fears, an open invitation to plunge into our psyches and courageously confront the abyss. Hence Christie's irresistibility - her utter acquaintance with our deepest quiddity. Who can forgo such narcissistic pleasure? Not your columnist, for sure!


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.

Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.

Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com





Related articles


  1. Should Prisons Have Color Televisions?
  2. Responsibility, Rehabilitation and Recidivism Realities
  3. Israel Has No Right To Protect Its People From Hamas?
  4. Moderate Muslims Must Denounce Murdering Mobs and International Terrorism
  5. Fielding's Education of Readers in "Tom Jones," Part Eight
  6. Fielding's Education of Readers in "Tom Jones," Part Seven
  7. Fielding's Education of Readers in "Tom Jones," Part Six
  8. Fielding's Education of Readers in "Tom Jones," Part Five
  9. Fielding's Education of Readers in "Tom Jones," Part Four
  10. Fielding's Education of Readers in "Tom Jones," Part Three
  11. Fielding's Education of Readers in "Tom Jones," Part Two
  12. Removing the Mist that Dims the Intellect of Mortals: Fielding's Education of Readers in Tom Jones
  13. Phoenicians
  14. A Look At How Cambodian People Resolve and Prevent Conflict Through Cultural Values
  15. American Exceptionalism and Cultural Canonization
  16. Proving Humans are Indeed Unique
  17. Thinking on the Human Animal
  18. Why Do Humans Think They Are So Superior?
  19. Are Humans Special in the Universe?
  20. The Father of Gospel Blues - Auto Recovery
  21. Assess Life!
  22. Frederick The Great As A Philosopher King
  23. Toronto and the Police
  24. Elizabeth Bathory - Fact and Fiction
  25. Was Rembrandt Paranoid?

 

More Articles Advertising Copywriting E-Mail Marketing Internet Marketing Link Popularity Marketing Marketing Strategy Newsletters Online Business PPC Advertising Public Relations Sales Scams S E Optimization S E Positioning S E Tactics Search Engines Self Improvement Site Security Spam Web Development Web Hosting Webmasters Writing

Featured Articles :
Auto and Trucks | Business and Finance | Computers and Internet | Education | Food & Drink | Home Improvement | Kids and Teens | Legal | Marketing | Online Business | Pets & Animals | Parenting | Recreation and Sports | Self Improvement and Motivation | Site Promotion | Travel and Leisure | Web Design and Development | Women

ArticlesClick.com || More Articles || More Authors || Tips || E-Books || Resources

© 2007 Articles Click  / Articles.articlesclick.com Email : info(AT)articlesclick.com  Powered by Destiny Infotek Limited

Partner Links: Linux Web Hosting | Web Hosting | SMS Plug-in | Readymade Logo Design | Web Templates Affiliate | SEO Top Ranking | Ebooks  Webmaster | Register Domain Name | Hindustanlink | MT & BPO Forum | Medical Transcription | BPO Services India | Mobile Phone Forum | Send Gifts to India | RSS Feed Guide | Search E-books | Downloadable ebooks | BPO | SEO Services | Mehendi World | Destiny | Web-link | Beauty Care Forums | Web Hosting India | Logo Design | Home Based Business | Google SiteMap Maker | India Tourist Places | Medical Transcription | Mehendi Blog | Teachers Forum | BSE Sensex | Digital Signature Certificate | Discuss | Manoj Jain's Blog | Jigg | Chartered Accountant | Hosting Directory | Free Blog | Honeymoon Tips | Wallpapers | BPO Portal

ArticlesClick.com makes no representations regarding either the products or external links.
The products and external links referenced in this site are provided by parties other than ArticlesClick.com