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Friday, March 22, 2019

Use of Imagination in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Study in Scarlet and Sig

While reading Robert Louis Stevensons The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Arthur Conan Doyles A Study in Scarlet and Sign of the Four, I found myself impatiently competing against Mr. Utterson and Sherlock Holmes to find out the solutions to the crimes. Stevenson and Doyle cleverly use the sight of their protagonists to unwrap through fictional literature the concern late Victorians felt astir(predicate) the rise of a new science. The characters of Utterson and Holmes resemble each other in their roles as objective observers who use imagination to create a throw in the readers mind about the narrative. In Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Utterson is a prominent capital of the United Kingdom lawyer retained to oversee Dr. Jekylls personal affairs. Utterson is characterized as an upright and sincere man who is genuinely interested in his clients well being. Through his impropriety with Enfield, a man about London, Utterson learns more about Dr. Jekylls friend, the mysterio us Mr. Hyde. For the readers benefit, Utterson exhibits his imagination by opening a window to the discrete aspects of Dr. Jekylls life. It is important for readers to understand the discrete aspects of Jekylls character including his good and evil nature that he continually experiments with through scientific study. This display of imagination allows the narrative to smoothly increase and quantify Stevensons attempt to reveal late Victorian concerns through fiction. In the same way, Sign of the Fours character of Holmes uses imagination through his role as an optimistic, amateur detective. Holmes is portrayed as being driven by his imagination, which compels him to kill cocaine in order to alleviate the feeling of boredom... ... at Pondicherry continue and while Uttersons concern with character of Jekyll discloses an aspect of the new science that probes the wave-particle duality of good versus evil. Works Cited and Consulted Doyle, Arthur Conan. A Study in Scarlet in The Complete Sherlock Holmes. New York Doubleday and Company, Inc., 1930. 22-75. Chesney, Kellow. The Victorian Underworld. New York Schocken Books, 1970. Macdonald, Ross. The Writer as Detective Hero. Detective Fiction A Collection of Critical Essays. Ed. robin redbreast W. Winks. Englewood Cliffs, London Prentice-Hall, 1980. Stevenson, Robert Louis. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. First vintage Classics Edition. New York Vintage Books, 1991. Veeder, William. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde after One Hundred Years. Eds. William Veeder and Gordon Hirsch. Chicago University of Chicago Press, 1988.

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