Literary Lens Essay On Frankenstein

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Literary Lens Writing Activity for Frankenstein
Historical Lens
Mary Shelley; the author of Frankenstein had experienced some traumatic events during her life, she had went through multiple miscarriages during her early life, and her novel relates quite to the emotional trauma she had gone through. Victor Frankenstein spent many years of his life studying and spending his early life creating a life. Once he had created this life form, he realized that the last few years were forming a monster, that he was completely disgusted with, and is forever stuck with the consequences of giving life. Towards Shelley; she had a miscarriage, a life she had given her womb to hold, had passed away, and the horror feeling she went through as that had happened, never leaves her, and she is now forever to remember what she had created is gone. As the monster tells Frankenstein:
But where were my friends and relations? No father had watched my infant days, no mother had blessed me with smiles and caresses; or if they had, all my past life was now a blot, a blind vacancy in which i distinguished nothing. (Shelley, 109) …show more content…

Shelley used this as a way to express that her child that she had miscarriage would never have friends, family, her and her husband would not be able to raise and nurture the child, and watch their child grow and experience life, because the child of course had died before it could do so. Shelley takes that loneliness she senses, and relates to Frankenstein's character as well as the monster’s character, and feels guilty that she couldn't birth life. Therefore, Shelley uses the tragic miscarriages she received and relates her raw emotions; of loneliness, guilt, disgust, towards Frankenstein to his monster. She related the monster as her unborn child representing that they both could not grow and experience an

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