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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Essay

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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was published in 1886 as a 'shilling shocker' novella written by the young novelist Robert Louis Stevenson. At that time there was a surfeit of cheap horror novellas. Stevenson's novella was different because it explored the evil inside human kind. I will look into Victorian attitudes and how these influenced Victorian life.

The cultural and historical context of the text is typical of the author but not his time because there was a contradiction between
Science and religion and this novella scared people about possibilities of evil. Victorian values at this time were very strict and those people who broke them were looked down on in the social order. Jekyll was the perfect …show more content…

When he first enters the body of Hyde he feels
'younger and lighter in spirit'. He also feel like his evil side has been 'unleashed'. He says 'My Devil had long been caged and he came out roaring' This shows that he feels unburdened and unchained in spirit because he is 'tenfold more evil'.

In the final chapter, it talks about the lives of Jekyll as Hyde. It also talks about his views on society. When Jekyll turns into Hyde he commits crimes and then turns back and practically forgets his sins.
This shows that everyone had an evil side but they didn't have a way to unleash it.

The last chapter also emphasises the Victorian views and their desires. It tells us that although the 'Victorian Dream' was a perfectly balanced society, the reality was different.

Throughout the book we notice a contrast between Jekyll and Hyde. The tall upright Jekyll is a big contrast to the evil, small, ugly and cold-hearted Hyde. Hyde is judged religiously by the 'stars looking down on him' this is a metaphor for the whole society looking down on him. At this time the religious beliefs were still strong and although science was coming through and more people were turning towards science and believing less and less of the church's teachings, the religious population was still the majority.

Hyde represented the scientific community whereas the

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