Theme: Dual Nature of Man Flashcards

1
Q

Evidence that Jekyll believes in dual nature of man

A

“man is not truly one, but two”. He is so convinced he is right he “risked death” by drinking the potion

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2
Q

How does Stevenson use the language of battle to describe the fight between the two natures of Jekyll

A

There’s a war within Jekyll and the “two natures that contended in the field” of his mind sound like two forces meeting on the battlefield

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3
Q

Why did Jekyll fail to fully separate himself

A

Because his two sides are “radically both”

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4
Q

What does Jekyll underestimate

A

The power and attraction of his purely evil side and how his good and bad sides are bound together

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5
Q

Why was being evil tempting to Jekyll

A

Jekyll felt “younger, lighter, happier” as Hyde

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6
Q

Why is Hyde created

A

Because of Jekyll’s desire to rid himself of sin, rather than deal with it.

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7
Q

How is Stevenson relating to Victorian religious beliefs with Jekyll and Hyde

A

A branch of Christianity called evangelicalism taught that all mankind are inevitably sinful, because Adam and Eve sinned. Stevenson frightens his readers by taking this further- the sinful side isn’t only inevitable, it can also be stronger

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8
Q

Why did Stevenson make Jekyll’s evil side less evolved

A

To criticise upper class Victorians who thought those who commit crimes are less evolved, and that evolution created a ‘perfect’ creature (them)

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9
Q

What are the four point’s to make on the Duality of Man

A
  • Jekyll believes there are two sides to every individual
  • The two sides can be seen as sinful and virtuous
  • The two sides can be seen as civilised and uncivilised
  • Stevenson uses man’s dual nature to comment on society
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