翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Sydney New Year's Eve 2009–10
・ Sydney New Year's Eve 2010–11
・ Sydney New Year's Eve 2011–12
・ Sydney New Year's Eve 2012–13
・ Sydney New Year's Eve 2013–14
・ Sydney New Year's Eve 2014–15
・ Sydney Newman
・ Sydney Hervé Aufrère
・ Sydney High School Rifle Club
・ Sydney Hilton Hotel bombing
・ Sydney Hinam
・ Sydney Hodgson
・ Sydney Holgate
・ Sydney Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford
・ Sydney Hollands
Sydney Horler
・ Sydney Hospital
・ Sydney Howard
・ Sydney Howard Gay
・ Sydney Howard Smith
・ Sydney Howard Vines
・ Sydney hydrofoils
・ Sydney Ice Arena
・ Sydney Ice Dogs
・ Sydney Indoor
・ Sydney Inlet Provincial Park
・ Sydney Inner Metropolitan
・ Sydney Innes-Noad
・ Sydney Institute of Business and Technology
・ Sydney Institute of Education


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Sydney Horler : ウィキペディア英語版
Sydney Horler

Sydney Horler (18 July 1888 – 27 October 1954) was a prolific British novelist specialising in thrillers. Born in Leytonstone, Essex, and was educated at Redcliffe School and Colston School in Bristol.〔Colin Watson, ''Snobbery With Violence: crime stories and their audience''. London : Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1971. ISBN 0413284204 (p.85-93)〕
His first job was with ''Western Daily Press'' and Allied Newspapers in Bristol started in 1905. This lasted until 1911 when he left to become a special writer on the staff of Edward Hulton and Co. in Manchester. He moved to London to work on the ''Daily Mail'' and ''Daily Citizen'' in Fleet Street, although he also worked in the propaganda section of Air Intelligence towards the end of the First World War. When it ended he joined the editorial staff of George Newnes as a sub editor of the ''John O'London's Weekly''. He didn't see eye to eye with the editor and after a big row in 1919 his employment was terminated.
He decided to become a full-time writer. He became a popular author with the publication, in 1925, of his first crime novel, ''The Mystery of No.1'', and with novels such as ''Checkmate'' (1930). Horler's work was influenced by other popular thriller writers such as Edgar Wallace and "Sapper". His main hero was "Tiger" Standish, a character similar to Sapper's Bulldog Drummond.〔Marvin Lachman, "Horler, Sydney" in ''Twentieth Century Crime and Mystery Writers'', edited by James Vinson and D.L. Kirkpatrick. (p.474-77).〕 Horler's work began to be commercially successful after being serialised in the ''News of the World''.〔 By the 1930s, Horler's books had sold an estimated two million copies.〔Turnbull, Malcolm J. ''Victims or villains: Jewish images in classic English detective fiction''. Popular Press, 1998 (p. 62-4, 118–9)〕
==Political views==
Horler frequently used his work to put forward his opinions. He was a supporter of the British Monarchy and the Church of England (of which he was a member).〔 Horler's works also incorporated his own prejudices. Watson notes both his fiction and non-fiction regularly express negative sentiments about non-English peoples. Horler's heroes, such as Tiger Standish, regularly use derogatory terms like "wogs" and "stinking Italianos", and Horler also expressed contempt for both the Americans and the French in his diaries.〔 Writers such as Bill Pronzini〔Pronzini, Bill. ''Gun in Cheek: A Study of "Alternative" crime fiction''. Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1982, (p. 121)〕 and Malcolm Turnbull have noted that Horler's novels regularly featured negative depictions of Jews as criminals and racketeers, and he made denigrating comments about the Jewish community in his memoirs, ''Excitement: An Impudent Autobiography''.〔 Not even the rise of Nazism made any change to Horler's anti-semitism; Turnbull points out Horler subscribes to "''wartime slanders of Jew-Nazi collaboration and Jewish wartime profiteering in his 1940s titles"''. Horler's book ''Nighthawk Mops Up'' (1944) features a Jewish villain, Wilfred Abrahams, who collaborates with the Nazis.〔
Horler also expressed a dislike of sexuality, especially homosexuality. Horler wrote to the British police demanding a crackdown on what he saw as "the alarming increase in sex perversion" in London, claiming the city's streets were full of male prostitutes.〔 In his fiction, Horler spent a large amount of time emphasising how "virile" and "masculine" his heroes are. One of Horler's characters, the gentleman thief "Nighthawk", only steals jewels from women he sees as sexually immoral, pausing in his work to scrawl the word "Wanton" on their pillowcases.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Sydney Horler」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.