Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of Lucid Dreaming

(2023). Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of Lucid Dreaming: The Place of Oneirogenesis in the Science of Deduction. Preternature: Critical and Historical Studies on the Preternatural, 12 (1): 55โ€“83.


This article examines a much-underrated aspect in the Holmesian canon: dreams and the potential for dream-rehearsals by virtue of the brainโ€™s โ€œdream drugstoreโ€ faculty. Frequently described as โ€œdreamy-eyedโ€ or the โ€œdreamerโ€ of Baker Street, Holmes possesses powers of visiting scenes of crime โ€œin spirit,โ€ exhibiting powers of oneirogenesis. This unorthodox criminological strategy marks him as a critic of Western rationality, placing him in a genealogy dating back to Thomas De Quincey (who recorded vivid hallucinogenic dreams) and The Moonstoneโ€™s character Ezra Jennings (practically the first sleuth in Victorian English literature). In the Holmesian canon, (lucid) dreaming plays a subliminal role, which calls to question what this repressed unorthodoxy in Holmesian investigations implies for the detectiveโ€™s preeminent science of deduction. Representations and adaptations that do not account for Holmesian oneirogenesis, are incomplete projections of the, ultimately and absolutely, human and oneirically harnessed faculties of the Victorian detective.

Sherlock Holmes; Lucid Dreaming; Problem Solving; Oneirogenesis; The Moonstone; Thomas De Quincey

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