Dr Jekyll and Hyde Essay (contrasts) In this essay I will be exploring the variety of contrasts that Robert Louis Stevenson presents within the novel ‘The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’. Contrast is used effectively in the opening paragraph in the novel through Stevenson’s portrayal of Utterson. It is said that the lawyer ‘’was never lighted by a smile’’ and in discourse he is ‘’cold‚ scanty and embarrassed’’ This conveys him as an unsociable‚ introverted person. Stevenson uses alliteration
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Doubles‚ including performance‚ are present throughout the plot of Harding’s Florence and Giles‚ with our main antiheroine Florence‚ a young girl with a murderous streak and an intellect far beyond her years‚ presenting ‘herself as unknowing in order to achieve her goals…[which makes her] unreliable but highly aware’ (Dinter‚ 2012‚ p.68). The narrative perspective is predominantly from Florence as first-person‚ although third-person is used at times‚ and her reliability as a narrator is immediately
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stood Henry Jekyll! This passage appears in chapter 9 as Lanyon describes the moment
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9 September 2011 Dr. Jekyll: Good or Evil André Gide once said “The true hypocrite is the one who ceases to perceive his deception‚ the one who lies with sincerity.” In Robert Louis Stevenson’s novel‚ “Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde‚” Dr. Jekyll is not a moral‚ decent man and helpless victim as portrayed‚ but a true hypocrite. The novel focuses on the supposed conflict between the forces of Good and Evil within the human soul. Dr. Jekyll theorizes that “man is not truly one‚ but truly
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Within ’Macbeth’ and ’Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’ the theme of psychological deterioration and terror are particularly explored through the characters Lady Macbeth and Dr Lanyon. Lady Macbeths deterioration is manifested through hallucinations and her speech; ‘here’s the smell of the blood still’‚ Shakespeare utilises the technique of olfactory hallucinations‚ conveying to the audience that her guilt has affected her to the point that she can smell the hallucinated blood on her hands. The adverb ‘still’
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STRANGE CASE OF DR JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE CHAPTER 1 ACTIVITIES CHOOSE A‚ B‚ OR C 1.) Mr. Utterson was … a.) A rather boring but tolerant man b.) A cold cruel man c.) A kind and warm man 2.) The shops were made to be… a.) Cheering for saleswomen b.) Attractive to customers c.) Threatening to criminals 3.) The passers-by who had seen the man mistreat the child… a.) Beat him severely b.) Threatened to denounce him publically c.) Asked the woman to beat him 4.) How is Mr. Utterson
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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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Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde consists of reputation‚ good vs. evil and damage control. In other words‚ Utterson tirelessly works to prevent his good friend Dr. Jekyll from being dragged into the horrid affairs of Mr. Hyde‚ and Dr. Jekyll goes to the greatest of lengths to prevent his Hyde identity from being discovered‚ in order to avoid anyone knowing of his somewhat questionable scientific work and morally despicable behavior. Much of the novel is based on the characters reputations and how they have
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story (Stevenson 1-78). "I am quite sure of him‚" replied Jekyll‚ "I have grounds for certainty that I cannot share with anyone." (Stevenson 30). Jekyll is speaking about his good friend Mr. Hyde‚ whom no one knows is his divided "other" personality (Stevenson 30). Literally‚ Jekyll knows Hyde very well‚ but cannot disclose certain personal information about Hyde’s life that he does not wish to share; yet the reader finds out later‚ that Jekyll is merely looking for a loophole in order to diverge from
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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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