Is Victor A Victim In Frankenstein

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In Frankenstein, Frankenstein’s Monster is often portrayed as the antagonist. But is he not the real victim in this story? I believe he is, having suffered from the day he abnormally entered the world, from his only parent’s abandonment to the prejudice of man that was held against the monstrous appearance which Frankenstein had ignorantly forced him to live with. I believe it was, in fact, Mary Shelley’s intention to portray The Monster antagonistically in writing, so that one would have to separate Victor’s journalistic perception of him from what she intended the reality of The Monster’s state to be.

The first example of where Frankenstein’s Monster was cruelly spurned from the world is enacted by none other than Frankenstein, his own creator. In the dark zeal that Frankenstein was enveloped in while creating his monster, he failed to foresee that the monster would be an entirely sentient human being, not one ignorant to thine own appearance, and he bestowed upon him an awful form of enlarged stature. This not only caused The Monster to despise his own appearance, but it also subjected him to humankind’s prejudicial ways. People hated him the …show more content…

He had to learn about history, society, and the world on his own. Stumbling through the dangerous world for his first few days of life in a stupor of non-sentience, he had to learn of nature, and more importantly food and hunger, which in any other life would have been taught gracefully to him by those who created him. Later in his life, he learned of society through the only friends he ever knew. These friends did not know him, however, and when he revealed himself to them in an attempt to finally make a connection within society, he was once more met with human prejudice against his appearance, and yet again he was failed by Frankenstein’s

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