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Understanding form and structure is essential for AO2 (15 marks on Edexcel Paper 2 Section A) — and often separates good responses from excellent ones. Stevenson makes deliberate choices about how the story is told, and these choices are just as important as what happens in the plot.
Jekyll and Hyde is a novella — shorter than a novel, longer than a short story. This form is significant:
| Feature of the novella form | How Stevenson uses it |
|---|---|
| Compressed length | Creates a sense of urgency and intensity — no subplots to dilute the horror |
| Focus on one central idea | The duality of human nature is explored with relentless concentration |
| Limited cast of characters | Every character serves a specific thematic purpose |
| Rapid pacing | Events escalate quickly — mirroring Hyde's growing power |
The novella is structured as a mystery or detective story, which was a popular genre in the Victorian era (Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories began in 1887, just a year after Jekyll and Hyde).
Problem presented (Who is Hyde? What is his connection to Jekyll?)
|
v
Investigation (Utterson gathers clues across Chapters 1-8)
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v
Revelation (Chapters 9-10 — the truth is finally revealed)
However, Stevenson subverts the detective genre:
| Conventional detective story | Jekyll and Hyde |
|---|---|
| The detective solves the mystery | Utterson fails to solve it — the truth is revealed through confessions |
| Rational explanation triumphs | The truth is irrational and supernatural |
| Order is restored | Jekyll is dead, Lanyon is dead — the cost is enormous |
| The reader and detective learn together | The Victorian reader likely guessed the twist before Utterson |
Examiner's tip: The fact that Utterson fails as a detective is thematically important. His rational, respectable Victorian worldview prevents him from seeing the truth. Stevenson is suggesting that Victorian rationality is inadequate for understanding the full complexity of human nature.
The novella uses multiple narrative perspectives, which is one of its most important structural features:
| Narrator/Perspective | Chapters | What they provide |
|---|---|---|
| Third-person (Utterson) | 1-8 | The external investigation — what others see |
| First-person (Lanyon) | 9 | An eyewitness account of the transformation |
| First-person (Jekyll) | 10 | The full truth — Jekyll's confession |
The move from Utterson's third-person narrative to Lanyon's and Jekyll's first-person accounts is structurally crucial:
This structural shift enacts the novella's central movement: from the surface to the interior, from appearance to reality.
The novella is not told in chronological order. Events are revealed out of sequence through multiple accounts:
Chronological order:
Jekyll's experiment → Hyde's early activities → Child trampling → Carew murder → Lanyon's shock → Involuntary transformations → Death
Order of revelation to the reader:
Child trampling (Ch 1) → Carew murder (Ch 4) → Lanyon's shock (Ch 6) → Jekyll's death (Ch 8) → Lanyon's account (Ch 9) → Jekyll's confession (Ch 10)
An epistolary text uses letters and documents to tell the story. Jekyll and Hyde incorporates epistolary elements:
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