What Is The Social Value Of Frankenstein Comparative Essay

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Great knowledge of the world and its mysterious ways is something many would love to have. With this great knowledge we have been able to find many of the technologies, medicines, and amazing works of art that we have today. But “evil” comes in hand with the power of such knowledge. In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein the powerful knowledge that Frankenstein possessed brought him nothing good but his end. His creation wasn’t something that was “good” or that brought him joy as he initially believed it would. Throughout the novel, Frankenstein, there is a clear important social value placed on beauty. Also visible are the repercussion of these social values, that leak into ones own personal values, and its effects on others. There is an immense …show more content…

When we first are able to clearly see the odd life form that formed one with Kane we figure that it must be the alien creature (Alien, 30 minutes). As the film continues, what we find is that the life form clinging on to Kane face implanted a life form (the alien) in his body. This revelation is apperant when we see the alien’s birth from Kane’s chest (Alien, 45 minutes). At the birth of this alien we see this small, yellow, and unattractive life form. Just like the monster in Frankenstein, not only is the creature hideous and alarming when we first see it, but also horrific is the way the alien came to life. As this unknown like form keeps growing and killing them off one by one. We catch glimpses of the alien, which all find horrific. Its metallic, rubber like black skin, its elongated head and inside out looking body, all of them un-human characteristics; it too like Frankenstein’s monster has no place in human life. Every character has a hideous, disgusting, and grotesque feeling toward the alien, with the exception of the Ashe. He believes the Alien to be beautiful and perfect; he must protect it even if it meant that meant that the crew on board all died (Alien, 1 hour 30 minutes). But no matter how Ashe could have described the beauty of the alien, the rest wouldn’t see it that way. Its grotesque and un-human appearance gets rid of any possibility of it being accepted in the human world, just as it was for Frankenstein’s

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