An Introduction to Robert Louis Stevenson’s Novella, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Providing Context for Your Reading.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DR. JEKYLL & MR. HYDE ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON CHRISTIAN RAMIREZ MARTIN
Advertisements

IDENTITY A CURRENT QUEST By Lucia Schiavone Liceo Scientifico A.Diaz.
Francis Gilbert Learn the plot of Dr Jekyll in five minutes…
Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde Thomas & Dylan.
Chapters 3 and 4 Dr Jekyll was quite at Ease and The Carew Murder Case.
Robert Louis Stevenson Scottish essayist, poet, and author of fiction and travel books Many stories have horror and supernatural elements Characters.
 Robert Louis Stevenson (RLS) was born in 1850 in Edinburgh, Scotland  RLS was the only child from a wealthy family, his father being a famous engineer.
The Suppression of Victorian Gentlemen Behavior in Stevenson’s Curiosity and Suppressed Behavior Mr. Utterson and Dr. Jekyll exude curiosity in the novella.
 His first great writing success was Treasure Island, a thrilling story of a swashbuckling pirate named Long John Silver.  RLS has a good claim as the.
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde CfE Higher.
The Major Themes in The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
* Revolutions occurring in France, and in America, thus many in England saw this as a turning point in history for a more ideal and civilized.
Background to Lord of the Flies. Part One: The Author.
THE LITERARY ESSAY.
Frankenstein and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Henry Jekyll’s Full Statement of the Case
By: Robert Louis Stevenson.  What does the image suggest about the character?
L.O. Gain an understanding of the background information surrounding the novella.
Analyzing Literature: The Formalist Perspective. Do these ads have a deeper meaning? content/uploads/2011/11/Juicy-Couture-3-
Author: Robert Louis Stevenson Genre: Gothic Mystery Novel Date Published: 1886 Setting: London, in the late 18 th century Protagonist: Henry Jekyll.
 What does the image suggest about the character?
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Published 1886.
VY_32_INOVACE_AJ3r0206.  Robert Louis Stevenson was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on November 13, 1850  a sickly child, respiratory troubles  as a young.
Robert Louis Stevenson Nationality: Scottish Birth Date: November 13, 1850 Death Date: December 3, 1894 Genre(s): NOVELS; POETRY
The Romantic Movement, Gothic Literature, and the Author Mary Shelley
SEPT 9 TH 2015: EQ: HOW CAN WE ANALYZE THE BACKGROUND INFORMATION OF JEKYLL AND HYDE? TOPIC: INTRO TO JEKYLL AND HYDE DO NOW:
Jekyll and Hyde Revision. Jekyll and Hyde Characters Utterson Lanyon Enfield Jekyll Hyde Themes Secrecy/mystery Suspicion The beast in man/suppression.
Robert Louis Balfour Stevenson (13 November 1850 – 3 December 1894) was a Scottish novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer of the Victorian era. His.
Robert Louis Stevenson ( ). Born in Edinburgh. He rebelled against his father’s Calvinistic religion. He travelled a great deal, especially in.
Jekyll and Hyde & Frankenstein Notes. Robert Louis Stevenson.
The story is set in London at the time it was written – 1886 and Stevenson uses the city to create mood and to explore themes. In the opening chapter as.
“Evil” Quotation Reflection “If the devil doesn’t exist, but man has created him, he has created him in his own image and likeness” - Karamazov “Evil works.
Writing Genres In Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”. Romanticism in Literature ■ Romanticism was a shift from ■ faith in reason to faith in the senses ■ Feelings.
Gothic Literature and the Victorian Period British Literature.
Contents of my work 1.Introduction 2.Robert Louis Stevenson 3.Stevenson`s works 4.Victorian era 5.Requiem 6.« The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr.
A Novella is longer and more complex than short stories but shorter and simpler than novels “Dr. jekyll and Mr. Hyde” is a.
Romanticism “We will walk on our own feet; we will work with our own hands; we will speak with our own minds…A nation of men will for the first.
Characterisation in comics! MEETING MR HYDE. Aims  To explore the differences between how characters are created in novels and comics  To explore and.
Copyright 2013 Online Teaching Resources Ltd Introduction Lesson 1 - Context.
Copyright 2013 Online Teaching Resources Ltd Introduction Lesson 2 – Consolidating Context.
What Lies Beneath Anchor Video When people say that someone has a hidden dark side, they mean that ____________. Another aspect of a person’s hidden dark.
Big ideas for annotation & discussion. Characteristics of Gothic/Victorian style writing: Author’s influences – childhood, Edinburg & New Town Themes:
Re-cap Chapters 1-4 Jekyll and Hyde. Fill in the gaps… Chapter One We are introduced to the good natured _____________, a lawyer. He points out to a friend.
Jeopardy Jekyll and Hyde Themes Characters Lit. Elements Story Structure Misc. $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Final Jeopardy.
In Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Lesson 6 – Symbolism 1.
Jekyll and Hyde The strange case of Jekyll and Hyde
Chapter 4 —The Carew Murder Case
Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde Setting.
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Jekyll and Hyde SLICED in QUOTES
‘Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’ What does this title mean to you?
Learning Objective To study Chapter 6 of the novel
In Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Fill in the gaps for the names of the chapters: Story of the ______
Providing Context for Your Reading
THE LITERARY ESSAY.
L.O To understand how to prepare an exam response.
Plot Overview Character Context (Written 1880) Themes
Providing Context for Your Reading
Social and Historical Context
Jekyll and Hyde The whole text
Jekyll and Hyde The whole text
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Robert Louis Stevenson
Keats 31st October rd February 1821
Presentation transcript:

An Introduction to Robert Louis Stevenson’s Novella, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Providing Context for Your Reading

After Robert Louis Stevenson’s death in 1894, his friend and fellow author, Henry James, wondered “whether Louis’s work itself doesn’t pay somewhat for the so complete exhibition of the man and the life….The achieved legend and history that has him for subject, has made, so to speak, light of their subjects, of their claim to represent him.”

About the Author Robert Louis Stevenson ( ) became an international literary star as a result of the popular press of the late nineteenth century. The Daily Mail was Britain's first daily newspaper aimed at the newly literate "lower-middle class market resulting from mass education combining a low retail price with plenty of competitions, prizes and promotional gimmicks”. He was a lifelong invalid (with a lung disease that was never specifically diagnosed), yet he was able to travel the world to the benefit of his stories and their vivid settings.

About the Author Robert Louis Stevenson wrote boys’ adventures, pirate romances, horror stories, children’s poetry, and plays.Robert Louis Stevenson wrote boys’ adventures, pirate romances, horror stories, children’s poetry, and plays. He was an atheist (obsessed with religious questions), a workaholic, he had anti-establishment views of politics, and he lived as a Bohemian artistHe was an atheist (obsessed with religious questions), a workaholic, he had anti-establishment views of politics, and he lived as a Bohemian artist One of his most famous published works is the adventure novel, Treasure Island (1883), which began a “Romance Revival” that refocused the subject of literature on the study of character.One of his most famous published works is the adventure novel, Treasure Island (1883), which began a “Romance Revival” that refocused the subject of literature on the study of character.

Characteristics of Romantic Literature Romanticism saw a shift from faith in reason to faith in the senses, feelings and imagination.Romanticism saw a shift from faith in reason to faith in the senses, feelings and imagination. A shift from interest in urban society to an interest in the rural and natural.A shift from interest in urban society to an interest in the rural and natural. A shift from concern with the scientific and mundane to interest in the mysterious and infinite.A shift from concern with the scientific and mundane to interest in the mysterious and infinite. Mainly romantics cared about the individual, intuition, and imagination.Mainly romantics cared about the individual, intuition, and imagination.

Early Reviews of Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886) Due to the fact that Stevenson’s writing veered constantly between high literary ambition and writing in commercial forms for money, many of his critics were confused as to where to place this novella.Due to the fact that Stevenson’s writing veered constantly between high literary ambition and writing in commercial forms for money, many of his critics were confused as to where to place this novella. Some critics saw as nothing more than a “shilling shocker” and commented “familiarity with which has bred in the minds of most readers a certain measure of contempt”.Some critics saw as nothing more than a “shilling shocker” and commented “familiarity with which has bred in the minds of most readers a certain measure of contempt”.

High and Low Literature Collide and Equal Success for Stevenson The novella was dreamt up, written, rewritten (after the first version was burned) and published in less than ten weeks (rushed for the Christmas market), and although its place in the literary canon was debated at first, it soon became undeniable that Secret Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde quickly became a commercial success.The novella was dreamt up, written, rewritten (after the first version was burned) and published in less than ten weeks (rushed for the Christmas market), and although its place in the literary canon was debated at first, it soon became undeniable that Secret Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde quickly became a commercial success. 40,000 copies of the novella were sold in England in six months, and tens of thousands of copies were pirated in America.40,000 copies of the novella were sold in England in six months, and tens of thousands of copies were pirated in America. After Stevenson’s death, the original text was crudely stripped of its nuances and perplexities, so as readers, we have to work hard to read the original version in a proper set of contexts.After Stevenson’s death, the original text was crudely stripped of its nuances and perplexities, so as readers, we have to work hard to read the original version in a proper set of contexts.

Important Background on the Novella The premise of the novella came to Stevenson in a dream – “All I dreamed about Dr. Jekyll was that one man was being pressed into a cabinet, when he swallowed a drug and changed into another human being. I awoke and said at once that I had found the missing link for which I had been looking so long, and before I went to sleep almost every detail of the story, as it stands, was clear to me.”The premise of the novella came to Stevenson in a dream – “All I dreamed about Dr. Jekyll was that one man was being pressed into a cabinet, when he swallowed a drug and changed into another human being. I awoke and said at once that I had found the missing link for which I had been looking so long, and before I went to sleep almost every detail of the story, as it stands, was clear to me.” The first version of the novella was burned, which it its very construction, begins the theme of strange doubling, a shadow twin resigned to the fire.The first version of the novella was burned, which it its very construction, begins the theme of strange doubling, a shadow twin resigned to the fire.

Important Background on the Novella The novella is a product of an uneasy collaboration between the waking and the dreaming self.The novella is a product of an uneasy collaboration between the waking and the dreaming self. The effect is that there is something very dream-like about reading the story. Descriptions have a hallucinatory quality.The effect is that there is something very dream-like about reading the story. Descriptions have a hallucinatory quality. The story begins as a detective fiction, but like a dream, it gets distracted, and evolves into something more dark and unnerving (pay attention to the interesting structure of this novella as a point that deserves further analysis and discussion – the structure of the secret and how it is revealed).The story begins as a detective fiction, but like a dream, it gets distracted, and evolves into something more dark and unnerving (pay attention to the interesting structure of this novella as a point that deserves further analysis and discussion – the structure of the secret and how it is revealed).

Narration in the Novella There are 3 main narrators in the text: Mr. Utterson (the nervous lawyer), Hastie Lanyon (the materialistic medic), and Dr. Jekyll’s own account of events.There are 3 main narrators in the text: Mr. Utterson (the nervous lawyer), Hastie Lanyon (the materialistic medic), and Dr. Jekyll’s own account of events. There are other narrators who also interject in the narrative: Enfield’s story of the door (seemingly inconsequential), and the murder of Sir Danvers Carew is filtered through the newspaper reports of a maid’s eye witness account.There are other narrators who also interject in the narrative: Enfield’s story of the door (seemingly inconsequential), and the murder of Sir Danvers Carew is filtered through the newspaper reports of a maid’s eye witness account. The identity of the narrator is unclear in the novel’s final sentence. Pay attention to this!The identity of the narrator is unclear in the novel’s final sentence. Pay attention to this!

Elements of Gothic Literature in the Text Stevenson embeds the supernatural in the everyday, a strategy often used in Victorian Gothic literature. Elements of Gothic Literature: - Ancient Prophesy or Omens - High Emotion - Supernatural Events - Characters in Distress - Setting as a Metaphor for Horror

The Role of The Double in the Text Doubles are everywhere in the text: Jekyll and Hyde are discussed by Utterson and Enfield, Utterson and Lanyon, Poole and Utterson…Consider the many characters who are doubles of one another in this story.Doubles are everywhere in the text: Jekyll and Hyde are discussed by Utterson and Enfield, Utterson and Lanyon, Poole and Utterson…Consider the many characters who are doubles of one another in this story. The concept of the alter ego, theThe concept of the alter ego, the second self, and the supernatural second self, and the supernatural evil twin are examined. evil twin are examined. Explores the mysteries of theExplores the mysteries of the modern self (strangers to ourselves) modern self (strangers to ourselves)

A Historical Context: Crime, Sex, Class and Urbanism in 1880’s London Enfield’s opening story (discussing blackmail, abuse, lynching) in the text triggers a whole set of anxieties that were occupying London opinion in the mid-1880’s.Enfield’s opening story (discussing blackmail, abuse, lynching) in the text triggers a whole set of anxieties that were occupying London opinion in the mid-1880’s. Blackmailers were becoming “the most infamous of criminals”Blackmailers were becoming “the most infamous of criminals” Child prostitution and sexual violence was recently exposed as a severe problem that was only increasing in its prevalence at the time.Child prostitution and sexual violence was recently exposed as a severe problem that was only increasing in its prevalence at the time. Consider that Jack the Ripper (infamous serial killer) was active around the streets of London two years after Jekyll and Hyde was published (1888).Consider that Jack the Ripper (infamous serial killer) was active around the streets of London two years after Jekyll and Hyde was published (1888). Violent class war was a concern of many at the time.Violent class war was a concern of many at the time.

Enjoy your reading of this wonderful novella. It is rich with descriptive language, potent imagery, and shocking revelations throughout. Proceed with curiosity…