Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson — book cover

Book details

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

by Robert Louis Stevenson

1886

About the book

Gabriel John Utterson, a London lawyer, grows concerned when his friend Dr. Henry Jekyll alters his will in favor of Edward Hyde, a physically repulsive man linked to a violent assault. Jekyll, a respected scientist, has synthesized a chemical draught that physically manifests his hidden moral depravity as a separate entity. As Hyde commits murder and grows increasingly dominant, Jekyll loses control over the transformations. This narrative examines chemical personality alteration, the Victorian social pressure to maintain a virtuous facade, and the biological coexistence of predatory instinct and intellectual restraint within a single consciousness.

This book serves students of Gothic fiction and readers interested in the psychological origins of the double identity trope. Those seeking a foundational mystery find a story that moves from external investigation into an internal study of moral disintegration. Readers walk away with a specific framework for understanding human duality, recognizing how the suppression of darker impulses can lead to a total fracture of the self. It provides a historical look at the anxieties surrounding late nineteenth-century evolutionary theory and scientific ethics.

Details

Published
1886
Language
EN