Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde - Context Analysis
- The development of psychoanalysis
- Stevenson's wife said that he read many report mostly from
France about the analysis of dreams and the subconscious
self and what it meant to us. His wife also went as far to say
that the reports was the seed fror the his dream and his
story for Jeykll and Hyde
- Stevenson said that he had read a article of a
young french man who developed a case of
having a severe personality change when in
shock which gives us the idea that he has read
this before the publication of Dr Jekyll and Mr
Hyde
- Sigmund Freud, a psychoanalyst who is seen
as the father and the creator of psychoanalysis
has many of the same ideas that Stevenson
had. It might have been very likely that
Stevenson has been reading many of his
articles which is why he might have been
exposed to the same ideas
- Freud's theories cover the ideas if the
subconscious self and how the
conscious self is covering up many of
the desieres of the subconscois until
we grow older we completely forget
the subconscous self
- Research to access the subconscious
self through speech and in many
cases able to identify and locate the
cause of some illness of the patients
self in his/her childhood like
Stevenosn
- Another book was published at the time which
was equally or even more disturbing and
shocking to its reader. It was called
Psychopathia Sexualis which was written due to
a study in sexual behaviours in people and case
studies and interviews. In the Victorian society,
it was forbidden to talk about sexuality. Writers
had to change there way of writting and change
past novels just lke DR Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
There is still a vauge mark of this within the text
showing Hyde as a sex-craving monster. It was
subtle enough for the reader to paint an
understanding of this novel which came to the
formation of different therios
- Many stories and novels from this time fall into the
category of “shilling shockers”. Stories that were
written about these other people in order to shock,
appall and entertain the upper classes. The lower
classes about whom they were written were largely
illiterate so they were not the intended audience.
- Stevenson’s Jekyll and Hyde, however, was
written and aimed at the upper-class people who
would read these “shilling shockers” and, as
such, caused quite a stir and ominous
atmosphere between them, classes. It was seen
as typical of the lower classes to engage in this
sort of behaviour (it was thought, for example,
that there were thousands of prostitutes in the
East End of London at the time the novel was
published) but for a well-respected gentleman to
have such a dark side of him was frightening.
- One of the most challenging parts in
living in the 1800's is that there was an
influx of lower and middle-class people
who swarmed through London
- The lower and middle class that was coming at a fast rate for work and housing made the
upper-class nervous because of different crimes that they can commit and the unnatural
and unprofessional look of the lower class. This caused the upper class to move out of the
area to a more safe area with a lot of upper class and low to no lower class
- This division of the cities into “no-go areas” was interesting
because it created an “other” in London specifically. Rich people
tended to live in the west and stories of the debauchery and the
goings on in places like the East End and Soho were both shocking
and fascinating to them.
- The 1800s in Britain was a time of great change.
- Science and medicine were also changing quickly
at this time in history. As we have seen in earlier
chapters, famous surgeons were experimenting
and dissecting bodies to learn all they could
about human anatomy. The first transplants were
carried out around this time too by men such as
John Hunter.
- Hunter conducted disturbing experiments like
imlanting a human tooth on a chickens head to see if
it would grow. This notion of a "Mad Scientist" shocked
the public especially the upper-class on this type of
actions because of people where against science
because of the theories they think it will create which
Stevenson created a novel about
- These themes are also carried through to Jekyll and
Hyde where we see Dr Jekyll in his London home with
his labs and powders locked away with his research.
He begins to experiment on himself (which John
Hunter is also reputed to have done) and soon, he
gets into a situation he can’t handle.
- Stevenson is only adressing this story
at this perfect time becasue htere was
a huge beleif in the dual nature of a
man but stevenson only creates the
story to show the possibility that it
could casue and how it already exists
within and it only takes a person who
endouvers science and "Powders" to
unleash this monster like Hyde from
within us
- Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde was in a time of medicene,
Human anotomy, Psycoanalysis about he inner
mystries of our minds and about human
sexuallity and also a time when classes are
divided causing major shocking theories of
people like the novel of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde