Substance Abuse In Dr. Jekyll's 'Addition'

Decent Essays
In Addition, Jekyll suffers from alcoholism or some other form of substance abuse in the novel that could have easily been caused by the previously mentioned disorder. According to Lilienfeld, “when Hyde runs into a little girl on the street and then mauls her, his action is judged by Mr. Enfield, the observer, as that of a "Juggernaut." Reed connects the Orientalism of this insult to the continuous imagery of rampant alcohol use among the "undeserving poor," pointing out that temperance discourse named the liquor industry as "the juggernaut." Lilienfeld touches on a subject that many people have noticed within the novel. This alcoholism was also evident in the scene where Dr. Lanyon gave Hyde a disguised Hyde the potion and when Utterson discovered

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