Dr. Jekyll and Victorian Literature
England during the reign of Queen Victoria was a very rigid, prudish, and regulated society, very different from the world today. In Victorian England, there were very strict rules which dictated the behavior of the citizenry. Those who wanted to be accepted in proper society were heavily restricted in every aspect of their lives. There were restrictions on alcohol and other substances which lesser individuals might succumb to. There were restrictions on interactions with other people, particularly members of the opposite sex or with those who were in a different social stratum than themselves. For example, a gentleman did not consort daily with a servant, nor would a common gentleman be likely to consort with members of royalty or landed gentry. Some men accepted these rules and others were incapable of conforming. Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde tells the story of a man who was unable to live with the conflict between his baser desires and the social dictum. The story exemplifies the Victorian era in its depiction of the servant/master relationship, the violence as presented in the plot, and of course the very duality of man that is at the center of the story's narrative.
Social standing is still...
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