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Encyclopedia > Auguste Dupin

Auguste Dupin is a fictional character created by Edgar Allan Poe. A fictional character is any person who appears in a work of fiction. ... This daguerreotype of Poe was taken less than a year before his death at the age of 40. ...


While not the first detective in fiction, Auguste Dupin was the proto-type for many that came later (most notably Sherlock Holmes). He lives in Paris alone in an old house. Many tropes that later would become commonplace in mystery fiction first appeared here: the eccentric but brillant detective, the bumbling police, the first-person narration by a companion character. Like Sherlock Holmes, Dupin uses his considerable deductive prowess and observation to solve crimes. A detective is an officer of the police who performs criminal or administrative investigations, in some police departments, the lowest rank among such investigators (above the lowest rank of officers and below sergeants), a civilian licensed to investigate information not readily available in public records (a private investigator, also called...


He appears in three stories by Poe:

He also has a brief appearance in Alan Moore's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen comic book. As well as being the origins for the popular Horror Culture magazine Rue Morgue Magazine The Murders in the Rue Morgue is a short story from 1841 by Edgar Allan Poe. ... The Purloined Letter is one of Edgar Allan Poes simplest detective stories. ... Alan Moore Alan Moore (born November 18, 1953, in Northampton, England) is a British writer most famous for his work in comics. ... Promotional still for The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is a comic book series written by Alan Moore and illustrated by Kevin ONeill, published under the Americas Best Comics imprint of DC Comics. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
SparkNotes: Poe’s Short Stories: “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” (1841) (1810 words)
Dupin is eager to survey the setting because the newspaper reports portray the apartment as impossible to escape from the inside, which makes the case so mysterious.
Dupin suggests that the police have been so distracted by the atrocity of the murder and the apparent lack of motive that, while they have been attentive to what has occurred, they have failed to consider that the present crime could be something that has never occurred before.
Dupin adds that the owner must be a sailor, since, at the base of the lightning rod, he found a ribbon knotted in a way unique to naval training.
SparkNotes: Poe’s Short Stories: “The Purloined Letter” (1844) (1551 words)
Dupin asks whether the police have searched the Minister’s residence, arguing that since the power of the letter derives from its being readily available, it must be in his apartment.
Dupin argues that the Minister D—— is intelligent enough not to hide the letter in the nooks and crannies of his apartment—exactly where the police first investigate.
Dupin’s most pointed criticisms of the prefect have less to do with a personal attack than with a critique of the mode of investigation employed by the police as a whole.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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