Examples Of Fixed Identity In Strange Case Of Dr Jekyll And Mr. Hyde

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Fixed Identity in Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Robert Louis Stevenson’s thrilling novel Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde ends with the statement from Dr. Jekyll explaining why he chose to experiment with changing his own identity. Jekyll reflects on the idea that he was born to be rich, respected, and good, with “every guarantee of an honourable and distinguished future” (Stevenson 75). Dr. Jekyll admits his struggle with living up to these expectations of having to carry his head high, as he has had to conceal his pleasures to do so. His account for creating Hyde is so that he can experience living the evil parts of himself, the parts that his culture taught him to hide. This theme of a society built around fixed identity is present All that is described about the young girl at the beginning of the novel is that she is trampled by Mr. Hyde and terribly frightened. The next pivotal woman in the novel is the maid who witnesses the murder of Sir Danvers Carew, and she is similarly described in simple terms, as weak and feminine. She is “romantically given, for she sat down upon her box, which stood immediately under the window, and fell into a dream of musing . . . she used to say, with streaming tears . . . never had she felt more at peace with all men or thought more kindly of the world” (Stevenson 47). Because it is such a rarity in the novel to find a detailed description of a woman, this maid inevitably serves as a stand-in for women as a whole and confirms traditional gender roles of being romantic, passive, and emotional. The trampled young girl also falls into this category, and without any more variety, there only exists a fixed identity for females in the novel’s

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