Tuesday, February 19, 2019
How Human Flaws Hinder Murder Investigations in Murder on the Orient Ex
Agatha Christie once said, Crime is terribly revealing. Try and vary your methods as you will, your tastes, your habits, your attitude of mind, and your soul is revealed by your actions (Christie). The reader may believe this inverted comma goes with her book, massacre on the designate Express very well and whatsoever may believe she used this quote as a thesis for the book. The idea of crime being revealing and the fact that crime is revealed by dint of the actions that argon taken suggests that murder is never really anonymous, no takings how hard the murderer tries to cover their tracks. In Murder on the Orient Express, Agatha Christie shows how human flaws hinder murder investigations through making incorrect assumptions, guardianship onto the bygone, and cultural stereotyping. First, Poirot, the lead investigator, shows that anyone could have committed the murder because of incorrect assumptions that are made about the passengers. The first assumption that is made is the person that kills Ratchett is a female. His first line of products is the way the person stabs makes them a female. As declared in the novel, It is a woman. Said the Chef de Train, speaking for the first time. Depend upon it, it was a woman. Only a woman would stab like that (Christie 52). The second argument made toward gender is the personnel office used makes the murderer a woman. In the novel, Poirot states, She must have been a very strong woman, he said. It is not my desire to speak technicallythat is only confusing but I can assure you that one or two of the blows were delivered with such force as to drive them through hard belts of bone and muscle (Christie 52). Poirot after assumes some of the blows Ratchett faced are done back-handed, as well as left-handed. He uses... ... where to start, to not knowing whether to side with moral or level-headed justice. Incorrect assumptions, such as looking at the way a person is stabbed and the force used with t he blow can lead investigators in the wrong direction. Another human flaw that hinders murder investigations is holding on to the past. Poirot was disliked by some people on the train because of mistakes that he made in the past, and eventually, his past caught up to him, as he was on base the Orient Express. Lastly, the cultural stereotyping that took place on the Orient Express be to be wrong for finding out who committed a murder. Murder on the Orient Express is a novel that shows that anyone can be guilty of committing a crime when you look at the incorrect assumptions, the past and who all it effects and the cultural stereotyping that takes place between certain people.
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