Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde - THEMES Flashcards

1
Q

What is an allegory?

A

Something that represents a hidden moral or political meaning

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2
Q

What are Jekyll + Hyde allegories of?

A

The conflicting human nature/duality of man

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3
Q

What does the duality of man present?

A

The potential of good and evil

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4
Q

What religious language does Jekyll use when explaining his experiment?

A
  • soul
  • angel
  • fiend
    (He believes they are at war within every human)
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5
Q

What is typically evil?

A
  • going back to primitive instincts
  • breaking social convention
  • breaking rules and unspoken normalities
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6
Q

What happened in the late 1800s that made the concept of evil so popular?

A

1888 - high profile murders - Jack the Ripper (murder and mutilation of 5 women)

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7
Q

How does Stevenson imply that that there is no such thing as pure good?

A

Jekyll splits his two sides - purely evil - Hyde; but Jekyll is not the pure good version

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8
Q

What is the duality of man?

A

Contrasting aspects of people’s characters

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9
Q

What is Stevenson trying to warn the reader about and how?

A

He warns about interest in evil matters - characters involved are punished - darker instincts should be kept in their place

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10
Q

What is another interpretation of what Stevenson’s message is?

A
  • the unfair rules in society
  • oppressive society
  • forced to exercise restraint
    (People can’t do what they want/be who they want to be)
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11
Q

What were there advances in, in the 19th century?

A
  • industrialisation
  • medicine
  • science
    (Change how people saw the world)
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12
Q

How did people feel about the developments of science?

A

Required extreme caution - unsure whether it would help or hinder

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13
Q

How is the tension between science (explainable) and supernatural (unexplainable) shown in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde?

A

Lanyon = science
Jekyll = supernatural
Conflict between Jekyll + Lanyon represents tension between science and supernatural

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14
Q

What is Stevenson trying to warn the reader about science through the character of Lanyon?

A

Lanyon remains too reliant upon rationality + science, so he is unable to cope with the unexplained - he dies from shock

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15
Q

How does Jekyll disguise his interest in the supernatural?

A

Darkness of experiments contrasts with wealthy house

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16
Q

What is Stevenson’s overall message about the supernatural?

A

It’s dangerous to pursue (eg. Jekyll), but dangerous to ignore (eg. Lanyon)

17
Q

What were some features of upper class Victorians?

A
  • good appearance
  • reputation (maintaining it)
  • didn’t matter what you did as much, as long as you had good appearance + reputation and society decided to ignore it
18
Q

How is Hyde’s name deceiving?

A

He is evil, but Stevenson implies that evil can’t be hidden - Jekyll tries to hide his undesirable behaviours, but doesn’t succeed

19
Q

How does Hyde’s appearance represent his evil?

A
  • shocking, horrific - appearance very important in Victorian era
  • small - not fully human
20
Q

How does Hyde bring out other’s evil?

A

Fear brought to those who see him - many want to kill him

21
Q

What are the main themes in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde?

A
  • good vs evil
  • the duality of human nature
  • science and the supernatural
  • appearance vs reality