jekyll and hyde Flashcards

1
Q

chapter 1 - “I incline to Cain’s heresy”

A
  • biblical allusion
  • Utterson means that his “sin” is that he doesn’t get involved in the personal affairs of others
  • blasphemous language
  • Victorian reader would not like such language as it goes against their ethos
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2
Q

chapter 1 - “drank gin when he was alone”

A
  • shows how Victorian society will go against anything considered sinful by society
  • he is alone as he is scared of being ostracised by society
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3
Q

chapter 2 - “the other”

A
  • displays the gothic theme
  • represents Jekyll’s alter ego
  • foreshadowing that Jekyll is actually Hyde
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4
Q

chapter 2 - “something troglodytic”

A
  • suggests Hyde is a caveman
  • correlates to the theory of evolution
  • shows Robert Stevenson’s radical beliefs
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5
Q

chapter 2 - “snarled… savage”

A
  • shows how Hyde is ape-like
  • animalistic language
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6
Q

chapter 1 - “street after street”

A
  • creates a sense of insanity through repetition
  • sets the gothic tone
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7
Q

chapter 2 - “great field of lamps of a nocturnal city”

A
  • great field of lamps suggest the primitive instinct of light representing safety
  • “nocturnal” represents darkness and that Hyde will reveal himself when no one is looking
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8
Q

chapter 2 - “human juggernaut trod the child down and passed on regardless of her screams”

A
  • repetition of juggernaut suggests the image is constantly being replayed in mr enfield’s head
  • shows Hyde’s psychopathic nature, “regardless of her screams”
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9
Q

chapter 3 - “cronies…intelligent, reputable men…judges of good wine”

A
  • shows his compassion and frendlienss through complements
  • “judges of good wine” suggests jekyll’s friends are wealthy
  • victorian audience would be pleased by this through the correlation of wealthiness to goodness
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10
Q

chapter 3 - “good fellow… excellent fellow…. hide bound pedant”

A
  • disingenuous language
  • shows his egotism as he gets angry if someone disagrees with him
  • ironic language as jekyll is bound to hyde later on in the book
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11
Q

chapter 3 - “smooth faced… slyish cast… marks”

A
  • lexical field of appearance and reality
  • shows how fake his appearance truly is
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12
Q

chapter 4 - “fog..full moon”

A
  • sinister setting
  • the scene was once covered with fog, but is now clear with a full moon
  • foreshadows that things will be exposed
  • symbol for a werewolf
  • symbolises the unnatural and the duality of Jekyll and Hyde
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13
Q

chapter 4 - “nearly a year later”

A
  • it has been a while since hyde has shown himself
  • represents the suppression and sudden release of emotion
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14
Q

chapter 4 “streaming with tears”

A
  • emphasises gothic setting
  • female stereotypical emotions
  • damsel in distress
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15
Q

chapter 4 - “not far from the river”

A
  • suggests the maid lives in poverty
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16
Q

chapter 4 - “the maid fainted”

A
  • simple language
  • shows the maids limited perspective
  • follows the victorian belief that her being in a lower class means that she has a limited viewpoint
17
Q

chapter 4 - “aged white hair… older”

A
  • suggests the old man is not a threat
  • victorian ageist society
18
Q

Marxist interpretation in chapter 4:

A
  • suggests that the lower class has to see the upper class as respectable and more moral, hence the description of the upper class older gentleman
  • Robert Stevenson uses this interpretation in this text to explain that this is not true
19
Q

Queer theory chapter 4:
“beautiful gentleman… pretty manner…innocent”

A
  • feminine language
  • women are usually portrayed as innocent
20
Q

chapter 4 - “ape-like fury”

A
  • primitive behaviour
  • juxtaposes the civilised gentleman
21
Q

chapter 4 - “storm of blows”

A
  • graphic description
  • sense of horror
  • shows that evil will prevail over good
  • reference to nature, shows how nature is a natural occurrence
22
Q

chapter 5 - “I swear to God”

A
  • repetition, attempting to reassure utterson that he is trustworthy
  • irony
23
Q

chapter 5 - “he is safe, he is quite safe”

A
  • “safe”, implies that Jekyll he is protecting Hyde
  • repetition of “safe”, implies he must be reassured that Hyde is “safe”, Jekyll is unable to know if he can contain Hyde again
24
Q

chapter 6 - “callous and violent”

A
  • indicative language of a barbaric person
  • deliberately juxtaposes Jekyll’s positivity, “he came out of his seclusions”
  • serves as an extent to throw the reader from one extreme to the next
25
Q

chapter 6 - “the rosy man had grown pale; his flesh had fallen away”

A
  • imagery of death, “pale”, “flesh had fallen away”
  • gruesome description to emphasise the horror that Lanyon had witness after seeing Jekyll transform into Hyde
26
Q

chapter 6 - “I have brought on myself a punishment and a danger that I cannot name”

A
  • jekyll feels remorse for his actions, “myself”, he is responsible for his actions
  • “cannot name”, implies he has created a monster in an attempt to play god
27
Q

chapter 7 - “premature twilight”

A
  • represents the liminal and representing transformation
  • foreshadowing we will see Jekyll transform into Hyde again
28
Q

chapter 7 - “before the smile was struck out”

A
  • “before the smile”, before Utterson was able to smile before he saw Jekyll transform into Hyde, shows how uncontrolled Hyde is
  • “struck”, violent language, it is at this point that Jekyll had transformed into Hyde
29
Q

chapter 8 - “lying on her back as though the wind has tilted her”

A
  • sexual innuendo, hinting towards Hyde’s crimes
  • reference to wind, represents natural forces, alluding to his natural impulses
30
Q

chapter 8 - “huddled together like a flock of sheep”

A
  • simile, shows how weak and vulnerable they are
  • biblical allusion, Utterson is seen as a saviour, conforms to the idea of social class
31
Q

chapter 9 - “you are one of my oldest friends”

A
  • Jekyll is deliberately using a persuasive technique
  • he is attempting to soften Lanyon up
32
Q

chapter 9 - “I beg of you “

A
  • Jekyll is attempting to get sympathy out of Lanyon
  • shows how sycophantic he is
33
Q

chapter 10 - “leap of welcome, it seemed natural and human”

A
  • Jekyll enjoyed transforming from Jekyll to Hyde at first
  • natural, ironic as nature is used positively in the context of Hyde compared to how it is usually portrayed
34
Q

chapter 10 - “I have been doomed to such a dreadful shipwreck”

A
  • Jekyll realises the consequences of his actions
  • shipwreck metaphor amplifies Jekyll’s guilt