Sherlock Holmes: is he upper or middle class?

Anonymous
I’ve always been curious.
Anonymous
Seriously?
Anonymous
Have you read the books and/or watched the movies and series?
Anonymous
Upper class dreams.
Bottom shelf palate.
Anonymous
Did you see the means he had at his disposal? It is clear he was wealthy but he was far from the upper class. He was by no mans lower class so what is left? Upper middle class.
Anonymous
If you had to work those days you were not upper class.
Anonymous
Classssssssss.... ugh.

Read the f’ n books.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’ve always been curious.


Illegal immigrant from Guatemala.
Anonymous
Middle class gentlemen. I think he speaks of his ancestors being country squires. He went to college (but didn't graduate). He has cultured tastes, including playing the violin.
He needs to share rooms with Watson (who is definitely middle class) in order to make the rent. No evidence that he was upper class, but he's not working class or poor. Definitely middle class in the Victorian class structure.
Anonymous
I don’t think the class structure from his time and place fully translates to America’s current class structure.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think the class structure from his time and place fully translates to America’s current class structure.


+ Definitely

And, the Holmes character-able to pass himself off as anyone, crossing lines of class, race, and gender, and indulging in disreputable habits (addicted to morphine and cocaine if I remember correctly) probably represents the anxieties of a rapidly changing England where the class system was increasingly unstable.
Anonymous
Aristocratic. Thus his eccentric behavior.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’ve always been curious.


Illegal immigrant from Guatemala.



No, that's Paddington, except it was Peru.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think the class structure from his time and place fully translates to America’s current class structure.


+ Definitely

And, the Holmes character-able to pass himself off as anyone, crossing lines of class, race, and gender, and indulging in disreputable habits (addicted to morphine and cocaine if I remember correctly) probably represents the anxieties of a rapidly changing England where the class system was increasingly unstable.


No. In one of the books he used cocaine (a seven percent solution), but he was not addicted to it or morphine.

Anonymous
He must have been wealthy; it was never clear where his income came from. He spent days just lounging around in his pajamas and smoking jacket.
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