The EI Podcast

The strange case of Robert Louis Stevenson

Jan 8, 2026
Alastair Benn guests with Leo Damrosch, a biographer and literary historian known for his work on Robert Louis Stevenson. They delve into the revolutionary structure of 'Jekyll and Hyde,' discussing Stevenson's moral conflicts shaped by his Calvinist upbringing. The conversation reveals inspiration from real-life figures and Stevenson's ties to Edinburgh's culture. Damrosch also highlights Fanny Stevenson's vital role as a critic and their shared life in Samoa, emphasizing how Stevenson's illnesses sparked creativity and complex narratives.
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INSIGHT

Delayed Revelation Drives the Novel

  • Stevenson structures Jekyll and Hyde as a detective-like unfolding, delaying the central revelation until the end.
  • That restraint makes the final reveal far more startling than film adaptations can achieve.
INSIGHT

Sober Narration Amplifies Horror

  • The narrators are ordinary, sensible men whose matter-of-fact tone amplifies horror.
  • That sober narration forces readers to rethink earlier scenes once the truth emerges.
INSIGHT

Evil As An Inseparable Human Impulse

  • The novella dramatizes the impossibility of safely segregating an 'evil' part of the self.
  • Stevenson treats the urge to hurt as a core human impulse rather than merely sexual transgression.
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