The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

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Robert Louis Stevenson’s novella, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, takes place in 1870’s England and centers on a man by the name of Dr. Henry Jekyll, who is a respectable doctor among his own community. In the beginning of the story, Mr. Utterson (who is the lawyer responsible for drafting Dr. Jekyll’s final will and testament) is walking with his friend, Mr. Enfield. As they are walking past this street, Enfield reminisces about a nighttime stroll that he took past this street, where he saw a small and disproportionate man attacking a young girl in the street. When caught, this mystery man by the name of Edward Hyde decided to make amends by giving the victim’s family a check worth one hundred pounds. The odd thing is that this check had Dr. Jekyll’s signature on it and was a genuine copy (Stevenson 4). This is the first glimpse that the reader has of the relationship between the respectable Dr. Jekyll and mysteriously grotesque Mr. Hyde (although people who are disgusted by him can never really figure out why).

As the reader realizes later in the text, Mr. Hyde is nothing more than a transformation of Dr. Jekyll through the use of a formula that the doctor had created himself in order to try and separate his good nature from his evil tendencies. This transformation allows Jekyll to carry out these evil urges in the form of this other part of him that is Edward Hyde. This is done to remove any blame that Jekyll could put on himself through the actions of Mr. Hyde (reasons which I later discuss). The obvious monster is the alter ego of the English doctor, Mr. Hyde, but it isn’t limited to only him.

As the text goes on, can a reader really look and say that Jekyll isn’t as much of an abomination as Hyde? Other than J...

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...quality that can’t be defined, but is still feared. On top of that, Stevenson’s book is not only about the monstrosity of Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde, one could argue that these characters are ultimately his thoughts on the animal that is the Industrial Revolution.

Works Cited

Daniels, Barbara. “Poverty and Families in the Victorian Era.” March 2003.

Freud, Sigmund. The “Uncanny.” Boston: MIT Press, 1919.

Singh, Shubh M., and Subho Chakrabarti. "A Study in Dualism: The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll

and Mr. Hyde." Indian Journal of Psychiatry. (2008): n. page. Web. 5 Dec. 2012.

Smith, Nicole. "Analysis and Themes of “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” by

Robert Louis Stevenson." Article Myriad. (2011): n. page. Web. 11 Dec. 2012

Stevenson, Robert Louis. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. New York: Scribner,

1886. Web.

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