Page values for "Conan Doyle's Sense of Justice"
From The Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia
"Research_Articles" values
1 row is stored for this page| Field | Field type | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Date | Date | 1993-01-01 |
| Title | Page | Conan Doyle& |
| Author | List of Page, delimiter: , | Harold Orel |
| Topic | List of String, delimiter: , | Justice |
| Summary | Text | This scholarly essay examines Arthur Conan Doyle's evolving sense of justice, contrasting Sherlock Holmes's pragmatic moral judgments with Conan Doyle's public advocacy in matters of war, law, taxation, prison reform, and civil liberties. Drawing on fiction, letters, journalism, and historical cases, it argues that Conan Doyle's moral convictions were forceful, often uncompromising, and deeply engaged with the political and social crises of his time. |
