Jekyll and Hyde Notes
Setting: - Darkness and light (including street lighting) - Dirt and dust - Fog - Housing – contrast of different areas - Cupboards, closets, cabinets- things shut away
Structure and Narration: - 3rd Person Narrative - seen mostly from the perspective of Utterson (characterisation) - Maud’s story of the Carew murder (Hyde’s second crime)
Structure and Narration: - 1st Person Narration: - Enfield’s story (Hyde’s first crime) - Jekyll’s letters - Lanyon’s story - Jekyll’s statement
Structure and Narration: - Framing: everything is at one remove: - seen through the eyes of others - told in letters or statements - seen only in part seen through a window (Utterson talks to Jekyll through a window) (Imagery)
Structure and Narration: - Draws us in further and further: even if we already know or have guessed who Hyde is, we want to find out: how, why and what it felt like. - Structured and written like a Report (cf Language)
Characterisation: Utterson - of unimpeachable probity - totally reliable - has led a very sheltered life - probably very dull – even boring (cf after J’s party) Lanyon Jekyll Hyde The relationship of Jekyll to Hyde
Imagery and Language: - Wine - hearth fires - animals - cupboards, closets, cabinets - windows - dirt, dust - fog - formal language - detailed language
Theme, Message and Relevance: - Jekyll well respected and the evil Hyde - Jekyll though it been a very pure powder, but it had been contaminated: the unknown impurity lent efficacy - Front of J’s house very respectable, but back is on dingy street (setting) - Framing – who and what do we believe – difficulty of knowing the truth
Theme, Message and Relevance: - Criminals who were well respected (eg Shipman, Soham murderer) - Political systems that claimed to be good but produced evil (Nazism, Communism, Inquisition, Prohibition (USA))
Theme, Message and Relevance: The nature of personality: - Personality changes caused by illness, injury, trauma, stress, alcohol, drugs - Multiple personality - Brain research (cf Jekyll: “a mere polity of multifarious, incongruous, and independent denizens”)
Theme, Message and Relevance: 3.The nature of evil: - our propensity to evil (cf Crime and Punishment ) - dualism - Is pure evil more powerful than our normal mix of good and bad? Torturers (cf Psychological experiments)
Theme, Message and Relevance: 4. The risks of scientific experiment: - nuclear technology - genetic modification - cloning (cf Frankenstein )
Antecedents: Historical: - Deacon Brodie - Dr Knox and the body snatchers, Burke and Hare (Stevenson wrote a short story based on this also The Bodysnatchers) Literary: - Frankenstein (Mary Shelley) - Confessions of a Justified Sinner (James Hogg) - Tales of Hoffman - Murders in the Rue Morgue (Edgar Allan Poe) Crime and Punishment (Fyodor Dostoievsky)
Genre links: The Gothic – esp Frankenstein (pre); Dracula (post) - Crime ficion – Edgar Allan Poe (pre); Sherlock Holmes (post); stories about Jack the Ripper (post); modern psychological crime fiction (eg Val McDermid) - Horror - Psychological fiction: Confessions of a Justified Sinner (pre); - Multiple Narratives: Confessions of a Justified Sinner (pre); Dracula (post);
Higher Essay Questions: development or deterioration of a character: Jekyll and Hyde contrast between characters: Jekyll and Utterson key scene the importance of setting: buildings/fog/light/rooms to eg appearance and reality narration: different narrators, framing, characterisation of Utterson, language imagery theme, message or relevance