Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Frankenstein and Confessions of a Justified
The chivalric Novels of fix Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Frankenstein and Confessions of a Justified Sinner The news program Gothic, taken from a Ger opusic tribe, the Goths, stood firstly for Germanic and then mediaeval. It was introduced to fiction by Horace Walpole in Castle of Otranto, a Gothic Story, and was used to depict its mediaeval setting. As more novelists adopted this Gothic setting dark and gloomy castles on high, treacherous mountains, with supernatural howling in the distance other characteristics of the Gothic Novel could be identified. The most(prenominal) dominant characteristic reckons to be the constant battle surrounded by the good and the dark side of the human soul and how that, given a chance, the dark side of human nature will gradually develop, with the actions of the character in question, until it has engulfed the good, and also raises the theme of suffering and isolation. Other key nones of Gothic Novels seem to be the misuse or abuse of technology. Fo r example, science is used to cook new beings, the characters turning against or abusing nature and/or God, where the character may take on the role of God, the forbidden attraction of evil, the thrill of the kill, and death. The novels Frankenstein, Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Confessions of a Justified Sinner all contain important truths about(predicate) human nature and mankind. By looking into these three texts, I am going to explore exactly how they fit or do not fit into the various interpretations of Gothic I have laid out. The two most prominent themes in Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde are those of the misuse of technologyand the dark side of man and all its attractions. These two themes are, in fact, directly linked with each other as it is as a r... ... Making monstrous. Frankenstein, criticism, theory. Manchester University Press, 1991. Boyd, Stephen. York Notes on bloody shame Shelleys Frankenstein. Longman York Press, 1992. Mellor, Anne K. Mary Shelley. Her Life, her Fiction, her Monsters. Methuen. New York, London, 1988. Shelley, Mary. Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus. Edited with an Introduction and notes by Maurice Hindle. Penguin books, 1992 Stevenson, Robert Louis. The inappropriate lesson of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. New YorkDover Publishing, Inc., 1991. Stevenson, Robert Louis. The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. 1886. The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Other Stories. Harmondsworth Penguin,1979. 27-97. Svilpis, J.E. The Mad Scientist and Domestic Affection in Gothic Fiction. Gothic Fiction Prohibition/Transgression. Ed. Kenneth W. Graham. New York Ams, 1989.
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