illustration of a face with two separate halves, one good and one evil, located above the fumes of a potion

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

by Robert Louis Stevenson

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Themes: Individual Moral Responsibility

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Critic Jenni Calder notes that when Stevenson wrote this novella, he was highly committed to communicating "a message about individual moral responsibility." The author clearly sought to emphasize the risks of interfering with nature, a theme that has resonated in numerous later works and films. This is notably seen in Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, published five years afterward, highlighting the severe repercussions of such meddling.

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Themes: Good and Evil

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Themes: Dual Nature of Humanity

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