Repression Flashcards

(17 cards)

1
Q

Front

A

Back

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2
Q

What is the central idea of repression in the novella?

A

Victorian society forces characters to suppress desires; Hyde becomes the physical manifestation of Jekyll’s repressed Id. (Throughout)

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3
Q

How does Jekyll represent repression?

A

He has repressed his ‘pleasures’ all his life, leading to Hyde’s creation as an outlet. (Chapter 10)

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4
Q

What does Jekyll mean by ‘concealed my pleasures’?

A

He hid his desires due to societal expectations, showing repression as a social problem. (Chapter 10)

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5
Q

What does Jekyll mean by ‘the worst of my faults was a certain impatient gaiety’?

A

He suggests his natural joy was repressed by Victorian morality, implying society punishes harmless impulses. (Chapter 10)

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6
Q

How does Hyde symbolise Jekyll’s repressed Id?

A

Hyde embodies Jekyll’s ‘animal-like’ desires, representing everything he has suppressed. (Throughout)

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7
Q

How does Stevenson show repression through narrative style?

A

Violence is described in restrained, formal language to avoid indecency laws, mirroring societal repression. (Throughout)

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8
Q

What is the effect of ‘the man trampled calmly’?

A

The calm tone contrasts with brutality, forcing the reader to imagine the horror, intensifying repression. (Chapter 1)

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9
Q

What does ‘something displeasing’ reveal about repression?

A

Understatement hides the true horror, reflecting Victorian discomfort with openly describing violence. (Chapter 1)

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10
Q

How does the Carew murder reveal repressed violence?

A

Hyde’s attack is described as a ‘storm of blows’ and ‘audibly shattered’, showing explosive release of suppressed brutality. (Chapter 4)

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11
Q

What does the contrast between restrained narration and brutal violence show?

A

Hyde is the concentrated form of everything Jekyll has repressed; violence erupts uncontrollably. (Chapter 4)

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12
Q

How does repression relate to Victorian society?

A

Strict moral codes force characters to hide desires, creating psychological tension. (Throughout)

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13
Q

How does Utterson embody repression?

A

He is described as ‘cold, scanty and embarrassed’, showing emotional restraint typical of Victorian gentlemen. (Chapter 1)

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14
Q

How does Utterson channel his repressed emotions?

A

He pours his passion into investigation and work, redirecting desire into socially acceptable outlets. (Throughout)

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15
Q

How does Enfield show repression?

A

His mysterious behaviour at ‘three o’clock of a black winter morning’ hints at hidden activities. (Chapter 1)

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16
Q

How does Lanyon show repression?

A

He rejects Jekyll’s experiments due to moral rigidity, repressing curiosity and emotion. (Chapter 2)

17
Q

How does Hyde act as a release from repression?

A

Jekyll uses Hyde to indulge desires without guilt, revealing the dangers of extreme suppression. (Chapter 10)