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Revision lecture The strange case of dr. Jekyll and Revision lecture The strange case of dr. Jekyll and

Revision lecture The strange case of dr. Jekyll and - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2018-10-31

Revision lecture The strange case of dr. Jekyll and - PPT Presentation

mr hyde How does Stevenson use settings in the novel to emphasise key ideas and themes How does Stevenson use settings in the novel to emphasise key themes Duality Hypocrisy Tension mystery ID: 706774

jekyll

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Slide1

Revision lectureThe strange case of dr. Jekyll and mr. hyde

How does Stevenson use settings in the novel to emphasise key ideas and themes?Slide2

How does Stevenson use settings in the novel to emphasise key themes?

Duality

Hypocrisy

Tension, mystery

and suspenseSlide3

How does Stevenson use settings in the novel to emphasise key themes?Theory:

Victorian society and its moral values and expectations

is a façade

. People claim to be upstanding citizens with high moral values, but everyone has a ‘devil’ that is ‘caged.’Slide4

Victorian society is a façade…What society and its gentleman display on the outside…

Is not the same as what is on the inside…Slide5

DUALITY THE HYPOCRISY OF VICTORIAN SOCIETY‘…for the buildings are so packed together about that court, that it’s hard to say where one ends and another begins.’ (Page 10)Slide6

‘a certain sinister block of building thrust forward its gable on the street.’ Slide7

‘heirs of a celebrated surgeon’Was Jekyll’s house based on a real one?

Dr

Jekyll’s house was possibly based on the residence of

famous surgeon

John Hunter

(1728-1793), whose respectable and renowned house in Leicester Square in the late 18th century also had a secret.

Hunter

required human

corpses

,

many of them supplied by ‘resurrection men’ who robbed fresh graves.

These

were brought, usually at night, to the

back entrance of the house

, which had a drawbridge leading to the preparation rooms and

lecture-theatre.Slide8

Story of the DoorPage 2 – 3

The description of the door represents a disreputable character…Slide9

Story of the DoorPage 5Slide10

Story of the DoorInto the building that the ‘blistered and distained’ door leads to, disappears Hyde. He returns with a cheque signed by (as we later discover or infer) Jekyll, who is described as the ‘very pink of the proprieties’ which emphasises his respectable reputation.

This is the first indication that a ‘sordid’ exterior and a respectable interior can be linked, even though this is not apparent.Slide11

Jekyll’s housePage 16Slide12

Jekyll’s house (‘Search for Mr Hyde’)The respectable nature of Jekyll is emphasised through the description of his house: Utterson regards Jekyll’s hall as ‘the pleasantest room in London.’

Jekyll’s house remains the only house that is still in sole occupancy and still seems wealthy and comfortable when all around it have ‘decayed.’

The irony is that Jekyll is not the upstanding pillar of the community that he appears to be. His house creates a façade; he seems better than those around him but is, in fact, just as disreputable. Slide13

Jekyll’s cabinetPage 51

This description provides another indication of the ‘normal’ and respectable existing alongside the unusual and ‘deviant.’Slide14

Jekyll’s laboratoryPage 28

On entering the door to Jekyll’s house,

Utterson

is led to the laboratory which has an entirely contrasting appearance and tone.

The laboratory gives a clue to the ‘chemical’ nature of Jekyll’s work; ‘normal’ science has been abandoned, indicated by the appearance of the laboratory. Slide15

Hyde’s house in SohoPage 26

Hyde’s house also helps to emphasise the duality of Jekyll. It contains luxury items but is also disordered and ‘ransacked.’Slide16

How does Stevenson use settings in the novel to emphasise key themes?First key idea…the settings help to show the two sides of Victorian side and indicate its hypocrisy.Slide17

How does Stevenson use settings in the novel to emphasise key themes?Theory: settings are used to create mystery, tension and suspense.Slide18

Story of the DoorThe building also helps to introduce an air of mystery into the novella…

Page 6Slide19

Foggy settingsThe novel uses a constant motif of fog to emphasise the hidden nature of Jekyll’s ‘other side.’ Examples include…Page 24: ‘A great chocolate-coloured pall lowered over heaven…’Page 25: ‘the fog settled down again upon that part, as brown as umber and cut him off…’

Page 28: ‘for even in the houses the fog began to lie thickly…’

Page 31: ‘the fog still slept on the wing above the drowned city.’

The fog motif also adds to the sense of mystery, symbolising the way that

Utterson

is cut off from the truth.Slide20

The city represents the Victorians fear of crime and of the darker side of life, a fear of the unknown…Page 12 – 13

Utterson’s

nightmareSlide21

Later Gothic texts (like the novella) were set in familiar locations…Hyde’s attacks both take place on London streets: ‘London was startled by a crime of singular ferocity…’The threat is presented as being closer to home which intensifies the fear created. Slide22

Darkness and isolation help to build a sense of horror…Page 3: ‘I was coming home from some place at the end of the world, about three o’clock of a black winter morning…Street after street, and all the folks asleep…’Page 13: ‘By ten o’clock, when the shops were closed, the by-street was very solitary and, in spite of the low growl of London from all round, very silent.’Page 25: ‘this mournful reinvasion of darkness…like a district of some city in a nightmare.’

Page 42: ‘the streets unusually bare of passengers…Mr

Utterson

thought he had never seen that part of London so deserted…so sharp a wish to see and touch his fellow-creatures…’Slide23

Soho

Page 24 - 25

Soho is presented as dark, nightmarish, poor, and morally corrupt.

This reflects the ‘evil’ of Hyde and also

Utterson’s

distance from this kind of life and behaviour.Slide24

How to use this information to answer an exam question…Settings expose the duality and hypocrisy of Victorian society.Write about:Jekyll’s house and its relationship with the ‘door’ in ‘Story of the door’ and the laboratory.

Jekyll’s cabinet.

Hyde’s house in Soho.Slide25

How to use this information to answer an exam question…Settings create mystery.Write about:The door

The motif of fogSlide26

How to use this information to answer an exam question…Settings create a sense of isolation and horror.Write about:

The motif of darkness

The description of the streets of London

Utterson’s

nightmarish view of London

The description of Soho