The Impacts Of Robert Louis Stevenson
The Impacts of Robert Louis Stevenson
The life and novels of Robert Louis Stevenson have impacted the world's culture, literature, and entertainment. Many things that many people take for granted came from the life and novels of Robert Louis Stevenson. He has had an impact on the entertainment industry such as movies, hotels, toys, and even casinos named after his work. Many of the entertainment items were originated after his death by people buying marketing rights from Stevenson's children. His literature such as Treasure Island and Kidnapped created a cultural phenomenon to millions of children and adults reading the wonderful novels.
Stevenson's life has had an impact on the world. Had he not lived, the world would have missed out on many great things. "Stevenson was born November 13, 1850 in Edinburgh, Scotland" (Bassett, "Stevenson", 897). His parents' names are Thomas and Margaret Isabella Balfour Stevenson. Thomas and Margaret named their only child Robert Louis Stevenson. Thomas Stevenson, who is Robert's father, is quite a great storyteller himself. Margaret, his mother, focuses on their only child by telling stories. "Stevenson was a sickly boy who suffered from a lung disease that later developed into tuberculosis" (Bassett, "Stevenson", 897). He has to adapt and deal with his sickness throughout his short life. As Stevenson grows older he reacts to his religious education and to the stiffness of his family's middle-class values, but that rebellion would surface only after he enters Edinburgh University. In November 1867, Stevenson enters Edinburgh University to study engineering. Instead of concentrating on academic work, he makes himself busy in learning how to write. He tries to copy the styles of William Hazlitt, Sir Thomas Browne, Daniel Defoe, Charles Lamp, and Michel de Montaigne. Stevenson writes many novels that are well known today. His first piece of writing affects the Edinburgh University School (Dictionary of...