Wednesday, November 13, 2019
How Does Robert Louis Stevenson use literary techniques to illustrate E
How Does Robert Louis Stevenson use literary techniques to illustrate  the social, historical and moral points he is trying to make in Dr  Jekyll and Mr Hyde?    Throughout the Novella, ââ¬ËDr Jekyll and Mr Hydeââ¬â¢, the author Robert  Louis Stevenson uses a wide range of literary techniques in a skilful  and sophisticated way to help achieve his effects and put his points  across. Stevensonââ¬â¢s unique use of language is vital to the success of  the Novella, with the structural and linguistic devices playing a  vital part in creating the unusual atmosphere, which makes the Novella  so successful. Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde centres upon a conception of  humanity as dual in nature, although the theme does not emerge fully  until the last chapter, when the complete story of Jekyll ââ¬â Hyde  relationship is revealed. Robert Louis Stevenson had a very strict  moral upbringing living in the nineteenth century, where class and  social standing were very important in such a rigid system. The fact  that he had such a religious background perhaps creates a link between  the main moral point of good and evil and his disciplined religious  upbringing, the bible teaching the importance of good and evil, and  the seven deadly sins. He uses a variety of techniques to put across  his views across on many social, historical and moral points.    Throughout the novella the author gives the readers an insight into  the morality of human nature by using different characters to  represent the double standards of society in the Victorian era. The  different language used for each of the main characters in the book is  used to emphasise the character and their role in the Novella.  Utterson, the lawyer, is described in the opening sentence of the book  ââ¬Ëcold, scanty, a...              ...t that Stevenson had such  a religious background perhaps creates a link between the main moral  point of good and evil and his disciplined religious upbringing. This  may have influenced him in his writing, (the bible teaching the  importance of good and evil, and the seven deadly sins). The Gothic  horror has been compared particularly to the detective fiction of  Sherlock Holmes, with both works being written in the same period of  the Victorian era. It is a testimony to Stevensonââ¬â¢s inventiveness as a  writer that this novella has had this independent existence over a  hundred years after the first book was published. Because of the  uniqueness of the novella and the fact that such a wide range of  literary techniques have been used, it is no surprise that, ââ¬Ëthe  strange case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hydeââ¬â¢, is one of the most famous  works of horror fiction of all time.                      
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