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The Name of the Rose

Essay, 2002, 6 Pages
Author: Markus Nowatzki
Subject: American Studies - Literature

Details

Event: Hollywood Detectives
Institution/College: Dresden Technical University (American Studies)
Tags: Name, Rose, Hollywood, Detectives
Category: Essay
Year: 2002
Pages: 6
Grade: 1 (A)
Bibliography: ~ 5  Entries
Language: English
Archive No.: V15018
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-20264-0

File size: 132 KB

Abstract

When on 16th of August in 1968 Umberto Eco encountered a book by some Abbé Vallet he had found the plot for his first novel, which was to become a bestseller. Thus the novel, when published in 1980, had an immense impact on the reader, who could choose from a large apparatus of secondary literature immediately after the appearance of the Eco’s novel. Although it seems that the novel is far to rich for any classification – it can be read as a detective novel as well as a philosophical paper, or as a historical novel as well as a work on semiotics – Eco probably has started a new genre, which has become a real boom. In almost any bookstore of today we are able to choose from murder mysteries a là Conan Doyle that take place in ancient Egypt or classic Rome, in the dark Medievals or in industrial 19th century. The genre of the historic crime novel not only includes the typical traits of a historic plot with appropriate settings within the time scheme of the era, but also the genius of an almost non failing detective figure that is accompanied by a student, or assistant who has to be taught the merits of logical thinking and abduction, thus abduction is central in the methods of Baskerville, who then becomes related to Holmes, the most famous fictional detective. Another quite obvious “proof” for classification might be the title “Name of the Rose,” which conveys the impression of a historic title. The film even plays with this, when it names itself as a palimpsest of Eco’s novel.


Excerpt (computer-generated)

The Name of the Rose

by

Markus Nowatzki

 

 

 

When on 16th of August in 1968 Umberto Eco encountered a book by some Abbé Vallet1 he had found the plot for his first novel, which was to become a bestseller. Thus the novel, when published in 1980, had an immense impact on the reader, who could choose from a large apparatus of secondary literature immediately after the appearance of the Eco’s novel. Although it seems that the novel is far to rich for any classification – it can be read as a detective novel as well as a philosophical paper, or as a historical novel as well as a work on semiotics – Eco probably has started a new genre, which has become a real boom. In almost any bookstore of today we are able to choose from murder mysteries a là Conan Doyle that take place in ancient Egypt or classic Rome, in the dark Medievals or in industrial 19th century. The genre of the historic crime novel not only includes the typical traits of a historic plot with appropriate settings within the time scheme of the era, but also the genius of an almost non failing detective figure2 that is accompanied by a student, or assistant who has to be taught the merits of logical thinking and abduction,3 thus abduction is central in the methods of Baskerville, who then becomes related to Holmes, the most famous fictional detective. Another quite obvious “proof” for classification might be the title “Name of the Rose,” which conveys the impression of a historic title. The film even plays with this, when it names itself as a palimpsest of Eco’s novel.

Soon after the novel had made his successful race on the book market, the very success of it looked suitable for turning the book into a motion picture. However, this time it was not a Hollywood Studio that finally could put this project into reality, but European producers and the French director Jean-Jacques Annaud were making this film.

The story seems to be simple enough, however the levels of the narrative are not. When the English Franciscan monk William of Baskerville and his novice Adson of Melk arrive in the Benedictine monastery in northern Italy the film does portrait a films of this era.

[...]


1 N.o.t.R. p7.

2 Königs Erläuterungen. p5.

3 „[Read Peirce’s Collected Papers, in which Charles S. Peirce calls abduction] ‚the first stage of the process of reasoning and interpretation.’[…] In seinen ‚Vorlesungen über Pragmatismus’ aus dem Jahre 1903 definiert Charles S. Peirce Abduktion als ‚Prozess, eine erklärende Hypothese zu bilden.[...and more:] Die überraschende Tatsache C wird beobachtet; aber wenn A wahr wäre, würde C eine Selbstverständlichkeit sein; folglich besteht Grund zu vermuten, dass A wahr ist.“ Wirth. P1,3. harsh medieval world without any modern romantic euphemism that normally occur in


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