The Pressure to Be Good Can Force One To Go Bad

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Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was based in the Victorian era, which was a time when hypocrisy was rampant. “Insincerity” was not the mark of a bad man; in fact it was what one needed to practice in order to blend with society and to have a decent reputation. Today one may think of hypocrisy as a bad character trait, where as the Victorians would have thought of being improper the same way. Therefore the Victorians were actually hypocrites, because the alternative was to be honest, and as a result improper. The pressures of “conformity, moral pretension, and evasion” made up Victorian hypocrisy (Houghton 146-149); furthermore they are also the very things that pushed Dr. Jekyll to create an alter ego, Mr. Hyde, and are what caused him to eventually be taken over entirely. Dr. Jekyll found that the expectations to stay in line and not show his inner desires were hard to control, so he created an outlet for them, Mr. Hyde. In a new society conventions determine whether or not one fits into society or is out casted from it (Houghton 147). To Dr. Jekyll, these proprieties were tedious and difficult to manage: “I found it hard to reconcile with my imperious desire to carry my head high, and bear a more than commonly grave countenance before the public” (Stevenson 48). Houghton states that individuals in Victorian society were inclined to avoid behavior that “might make him look like an outsider or upstart” (147). In the form of Mr. Hyde, Dr. Jekyll was able to gain relief from the cultural pressures to act and behave a certain way. He could finally escape the demands that he faced on an everyday basis. Dr. Jekyll had done what he needed to do to “avoid social stigma” in his public life (147): “Men have hired bravos to transa... ... middle of paper ... ...principles that surrounded him in the hypocrisy of Victorian life. He wanted to conform to society, act like he was faultless, and hide his inner desires. However, he took joy in his feelings of impropriety, and he did not want to let them go. He succeeded in creating the evil Mr. Hyde, but he still felt a yearning to be imperfect as Dr. Jekyll, which caused Mr. Hyde to gain power over Dr. Jekyll, and take over his free will. In the end, all Dr. Jekyll had control over was whether he lived or died, so he took his and Mr. Hyde’s life. Dr. Jekyll died in the form of his own evil double, Mr. Hyde. Works Cited Houghton, Walter. “[Hypocrisy].” Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Ed. Katherine Linehan. New York: Norton, 2003. 146-49. Print. Stevenson, Robert Louis. Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Ed. Katherine Linehan. New York: Norton, 2003. Print.

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