Label Of Monster In Frankenstein Research Paper

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The Label of Monster in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

The novel, Frankenstein, was written by Mary Shelley in 1817. The novel is of a gothic genre as it includes the themes of monsters, death and oppressive nature. Her father raised her, after her mother's death ten days after Mary was born. Her father, William Godwin, was a radical philosopher, who encouraged Mary to read a lot. Mary met a young, married poet when she was sixteen; they fell in love and eloped together in 1814. Mary's life became full of sadness as three of her children died and her half-sister committed suicide. The couple became free to marry when Percy Shelley's wife drowned herself, yet their fathers never forgave them for being together. …show more content…

This is relevant to Frankenstein as the monster was banished by other human beings for being aesthetically challenged.

The story of Adam and Eve is also important to the content of this novel as Adam rebels against God and eats from the tree of knowledge. They were both banished from the Garden of Eden for losing their innocence. Victor Frankenstein's childhood is a paradise but he thrives for knowledge and rebels against God by creating a man. The monster becomes self-aware (like Adam and Eve) after seeing his own reflection. The monster proceeds to clothe himself because of cold while Adam and Eve clothe themselves out of sin.

Romanticism is relative to this novel as is focus' on the imagination, feelings, qualities that affect you greatly and the power of nature. An offshoot of romanticism is Gothic novel, which displays stories of strangeness and mystery in dark lonely places. Frankenstein is described as a Gothic novel as it has dark settings, satanic imagery and is full of revenge.

During Mary Shelley's lifetime there was rapid scientific …show more content…

I think that the monster had good reasons for all of his actions, although this doesn't make them acceptable. In the beginning of the novel, after the monster was created, he didn't understand human beings and their emotions, so it took him a while to learn what was right and wrong. I think that when the old man's family at the cottage rejected the monster, he was deeply affected.

His actions can be partly blamed for the way he was treated. Humans didn't accept the monster so this made him act out murders. I think that the monster needed a friend and when the cottagers don't like him, and when William tries to run away from him, he feels absent of human emotions and reacts in an inhuman way. He killed William and the cottagers so here he acted like a monster and I don't think that his ill treatment can be an excuse for murder.

The murders of Justine and Elizabeth were uncalled for, as they hadn't met the monster. He killed them because of their association with Victor Frankenstein.

The monster's threat to Victor on his wedding night also signifies that he's a monster because he doesn't kill Victor, he kills one

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