Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Case Study

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The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a classic story published in 1886 by Robert Louis Stevenson. It is about a man who transforms between two personae: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. This novel focuses on Mr. Utterson, a lawyer and friend of Dr. Jekyll’s. The novel starts with John Utterson talking with his other friend who has just witnessed an odd situation. A man identified as Hyde run over a girl, only to pay off her family later with a check from Dr. Jekyll. This situation is made even stranger since Jekyll’s will has recently been changed. Mr. Hyde now stands to inherit everything. Mr. Utterson believing that the two men are separate people, thinks that the cruel Mr. Hyde is some how blackmailing Dr. Jekyll. Mr. Utterson questions Dr. Jekyll about Hyde, but Jekyll tells him to mind his own business. Unfortunately, Mr. Utterson cannot do that. A year later, Mr. Hyde attacks someone else: he beats a man with a cane, causing the man’s death. The police involve Mr. Utterson because he knew the victim. Mr. Utterson takes them to Mr. Hyde’s apartment, where they find the murder weapon, which is a gift that Mr. Utterson himself gave to Dr. Jekyll. Mr. …show more content…

Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. To compare Jekyll and Hyde to The Nutty Professor, Professor Kelp is the exact antithesis of Buddy Love, just as Dr. Jekyll is the moral antithesis of Mr. Hyde. one of the similarities between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and The Nutty Professor is that they had the desire to change themselves. Both Prof. Kelp and Dr. Jekyll had motives for assuming their alter egos: Jekyll wished to separate his good side from his evil side, while Kelp wanted strength. Some other similarities include how neither the doctor nor the professor were too fond of their alternate personas; both benefited and suffered from simulating their alter egos; both began to transform to their alter egos at random; and both began running out of ingredients for their potions at the

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