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    Mr Hyde

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    How does Stevenson explore ideas of good and evil in the novella “Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde?” The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr‚ Hyde. Jekyll and Hyde are like a dual personality‚ a single individual dissociate into two. They have become what Otto status calls opposing selves‚ According to Rank‚ the double in primitive societies is conceived of as a shadow‚ representing both the living person and the dead. This shadow survives the self‚ insuring immortality and thus functioning as a kind of guardian

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    Jekyll 01

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    Doctor Jekyll responsible for what Mr. Hyde does? “Man is not truly one‚ but truly two." Have you ever thought of being someone else? Whether it’s a successful entrepreneur‚ actor or sports figure? Robert Louis Stevenson’s novel "The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" considered an original classic‚ due to not only the manner in which it’s written but also due to a number of timeless themes consisting of philosophical questions regarding human being. One that is particularly thrilling is

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    The Conscious and Unconscious: Analysis on the Life of Dr. Henry Jekyll and Mr. Edward Hyde By Bernadine SyTiong March 16 2010 “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” by Robert Louis Stevenson originated from a dream that the author once had and he described it as “a fine bogy tale” when he awoke from it. Stevenson was first inspired from the city’s low life and the bizarre characters that he came across with and that his Calvinistic upbringing and his constant fight against ill-health

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    How Does Stevenson Represent Victorian Society In His Novella ’Jekyll And Hyde’? Throughout the novella ’Jekyll and Hyde’‚ Robert Louis Stevenson represents Victorian society in various ways. The characters used in the novella are an example of what Stevenson thought of London in Victorian times. Moral views of people living around this time have changed imensely to the present. The Victorian era seems to be a time of many contradictions and secrets from the rest of society. Any thoughts or feelings

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    Dr Jekyll

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    Other critics link The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde to a particular concern of the post-Darwinian world of the late nineteenth century: the fear that British society had become too civilized‚ too cultured. British men‚ it was feared‚ had become effete and no longer able to lead the British Empire. This fear that British men were not “manly” enough had the potential to destabilize England’s sense of leadership and cultural superiority. After all‚ the British defended their subjugation of

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    Mr Hyde

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    Utterson is a lawyer‚ who is friends with Dr. Jekyll‚ and knows of the mysterious and troublesome Mr. Hyde. Dr. Jekyll has given his will‚ which has some strange requests‚ to Mr. Utterson in case anything should happen to him. While reading the contents of the will‚ Mr. Utterson begins to realize that Dr. Jekyll’s handwriting is very similar to that of Mr. Hyde’s. One day‚ Poole‚ an employee of Dr. Jekyll‚ calls the lawyer and tells him that Dr. Jekyll has locked himself in a closet and refuses to

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    Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic novella Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was published in January 1886. It recounts the horrific tale of a scientist whose experiment backfires and leads him to his own end. It was the author’s masterpiece and sold around 40‚000 copies in six months in England and became a popular sensation in America. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde‚ a novella written in Bournemouth and set in London was one written in the late nineteenth century in the backdrop of the scientific

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    Makes ‘The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’ an Effective Horror Story? The most famous shilling shocker of the Victorian Era was “The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde”‚ the 1886 novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. It is set in Victorian London where the lawyer‚ Mr Utterson investigates a strange relationship between his client‚ Dr Henry Jekyll and the mysterious figure‚ Mr Edward Hyde. But the novella takes an unexpected twist when the very well respected Dr Jekyll reveals that his experiment

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    could disappear and lay waiting inside Jekyll ready to burst out at any time. The concept of duality in Jekyll and Hyde is interesting because Jekyll is Hyde‚ the good is the evil‚ and Jekyll knows that inside him is something terrible and‚ although he tries to control it‚ he knows that the evil in him will come out and he will be left in the passenger seat‚ watching. This is further shown in the way that Stevenson presents Hyde; Hyde is smaller than Jekyll‚ he is broad and hairy and rather short

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    Stevenson presents the character Mr Hyde as being terrifying and animal-like by using imagery. Hyde is described as a predator‚ he ’snarls’ and breaks into a ’savage’ laughs which suggests he’s intimidating. Mr Hyde also possesses ’extraordinary quickness‚’ which is not like a human‚ this could suggest he is athletic even though he doesn’t look like it. In the extract‚ he is said to be ’hardly human‚’ that could refer to his barbaric‚ animal-like behavior. He gives the impression of being possessed

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