What makes mr. hyde so scary




















Rather than being confined and controlled, as people with disabilities were at the time, Mr. Hyde crossed the boundaries and dared to enter "normal" society and wreak whatever havoc he could on those who mocked, feared or rejected him. The "murderous mixture of timidity and boldness" 15 ascribed to Mr. Hyde early in the text eventually becomes pure boldness and inability to be socially controlled.

This rejection of rules, this crossing of boundaries, is the final cause of the fear of Mr. The fact that he can be free with his uncontrolled, evil, disabled body, and that "normal" society is potentially no longer safe from him, is terrifying to characters in the stories, to readers then, and to a degree one may or may not wish to admit readers now as well.

It can now be concluded that what causes a man to feel "a shudder in his blood" 16 in the presence of Mr. Hyde is not simply one aspect of his character. Instead, it is the combination of evil, disability and inability to be controlled that makes Mr. Hyde so scary to characters in and readers of Stevenson's tale, even today. Evilness creates Hyde's disabled body or vice versa and when he, an evil, disabled, sub-human becomes uncontrolled, it is terrifying.

Hyde crosses the boundaries that protect "us" from "them. It reads:. Here Hyde is acknowledged as possibly evil, possibly disabled and possibly capable of murder, yet even in recognizing all three factors, Utterson feels there is something else that is disturbing him.

It could be that once Utterson realizes all three of these things are true about Hyde, his fears have been legitimized, but there is another possible reading as well.

Perhaps this "something else" cannot be found in the character of Mr. Hyde at all, but in Mr. Utterson himself, in non-disabled society, in ourselves. If the combination of evil, disability and inability to be controlled does not fully explain the viewer's fear, could it be then that the possibility of uncontrolled evil and disability in all of us causes the multi-layered fear of Mr. Perhaps, it is not Mr. Hyde we're scared of at all, but the parts of ourselves we fail to recognize, yet know we contain.

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Hyde So Scary? What Makes Mr. It reads: Mr. Hyde was pale and dwarfish, he gave an impression of deformity without any nameable malformation, he had a displeasing smile, he had borne himself to the lawyer with a sort of murderous mixture of timidity and boldness, and he spoke with a husky, whispering and somewhat broken voice; all these points were against him, but not all of these together could explain the hitherto unknown disgust, loathing and fear with which Mr.

Utterson regarded him. Stevenson Here Hyde is acknowledged as possibly evil, possibly disabled and possibly capable of murder, yet even in recognizing all three factors, Utterson feels there is something else that is disturbing him. Works Cited Adams, James Eli. Bowe, Frank. Handicapping America: Barriers to Disabled People. Holmes, Martha Stoddard. LaCom, Cindy. View 1 excerpt, cites background. As society becomes more technological on a daily basis, we are heavily influenced by the steady influx of information we receive from various types of media.

This dissertation will investigate the … Expand. Disability, Literature, Genre. Related Papers. Abstract 4 Citations Related Papers. Since Hyde represents the purely evil in man or in Dr. Jekyll , he is, therefore, symbolically represented as being much smaller than Dr.

Jekyll — Jekyll's clothes are far too large for him — and Hyde is also many years younger than Jekyll, symbolically suggesting that the evil side of Jekyll did not develop until years after he was born.

Hyde also creates terror; the servants are extremely frightened of him. When they think he is around the house, the servants cringe in horror, and some go into hysterics. As the novel progresses, Hyde's evil becomes more and more pronounced. He bludgeons Sir Danvers Carew to death for absolutely no reason other than the fact that Sir Danvers appeared to be a good and kindly man — and pure evil detests pure goodness.

Since Hyde represents the evil or perverse side of Jekyll, and since Jekyll does, vicariously, enjoy the degradations which Hyde commits, Hyde gradually begins to take the ascendancy over the good Dr. I never saw a man I so disliked, and yet I scarce know why. Stevenson, Robert Louis. Martin A. Peterborough: Broadview Press Ltd. Arata, Stephen D. Davis, Lennard. Enforcing Normalcy: Disability, Deafness, and the Body.

New York: Verso, Hurley, Kelly. Cambridge: Cambridge UP,



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