anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (Default)
Anghraine ([personal profile] anghraine) wrote2024-02-28 03:34 pm

Tumblr crosspost (15 September 2020)

I re-read Death on the Nile to prepare for the adaptation and … whew, problematic does not begin to cover it.

#i still love jacqueline and linnet is interesting but MAXIMUM YIKES #don't even with it was another time #jrrt at least retconned some of his shit but christie did ...... not

dragoness_e: (Echo Bazaar)

[personal profile] dragoness_e 2024-02-29 02:41 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't read that one since I was a teenager or in my tweens, and back then I was oblivious to anything but the most extreme bigotry (I didn't notice the racism in Lovecraft, but I did notice the homophobia in Adams' Horseclans novels).

I've re-read other Christie murder mysteries in recent years, and what struck me was the really nasty classism, more than racism. OTOH, not too many non-whites in her 1920s English villages to be racist about... But the classism just reeked. Servants always portrayed as, well, servile, timid, and stupid; social-climbers were always punished by the narrative--either by being murdered, or by being the murderers, because getting above your station is the worst of all crimes in Agatha Christie's novels.