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The Strange Case Of Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde

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Restraint, restriction, and inhibition of one’s character can be relentless and suffocating. Throughout the Victorian Era, superficial decorum was a priority for some, but a lifestyle for many. This inescapable flaw of society led to unattainable standards to be perfect and citizen’s constant doubt of their actions. The essence of Stevenson’s novella, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, was the prosecution of the Victorian Era’s condemning nature, and the hypocrisy toward those who deviated from the status quo of propriety and stoicism. Throughout the Victorian Era, there was an aura of confusion and contradiction. The metaphorical envelope was being pushed in the areas of science and literature, but respectability and morality …show more content…

Who defines evil? (Ferrer-Medina 67+). After creating his elixir, Jekyll is finally able to express his true desires, yet he cannot be a single identity for fear of losing his respectable reputation. Dr. Jekyll deliberately tries to resist turning into Mr. Hyde once he realizes how much damage his true self has caused to his community (67+). “In the case of Jekyll and Hyde, civilization lent man the constraints necessary for him to live a productive and peaceful life; it stands for morality” (67+). It is ironic how in the end, Hyde had to take the elixir to turn back into Dr. Jekyll, whereas before Jekyll had to take the elixir to turn into Mr. Hyde. He was becoming his desires, and that was wrong because society told him …show more content…

Henry Jekyll revealed that he held back all his emotions for many years, as he wanted to appear to be a placid man of great reputability (Stevenson 76). To his dismay, Jekyll changed throughout the novel. Not in the sense of him becoming physically changed into Mr. Edward Hyde, but psychologically he accepted who he was, which was something he had never done before (Tudor and Hojbota 206+). However, it proved that he could not separate himself from Mr. Hyde—his alter-ego that possessed an evil nature that fell subject fanciful whims. They were always the same person, and refusing to turn into Mr. Hyde did not exempt him from what his society held as sin (89). This is what Stevenson’s writing called into question: what gave society the right to designate his actions as sinful? No matter the answer to that question, Dr. Jekyll believed that repression and not being able to be his true self was far worse than Hyde’s actions, or the consequences may have been brought about because of them

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