The Presentation Of Women In Mel Brooks 'Young Frankenstein'

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The presentation of women in Frankenstein variations between the book Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and the movie ‘Young Frankenstein’ by Mel Brooks starring Gene Wilder, but with a few key representation of women throughout each. In this I will explain the differences and similarities about the presentation of women.
With the presentation of women we need to understand what time era this is all taking place in. The book Frankenstein by Mary Shelley takes place in the 18th century around the Geneva / Naples where he was born and raised. The women of Frankenstein represent the treatment of women in the early 1800’s. Shelley’s embodiment of suffering and death of her female characters shows that in the 1800’s it was acceptable.
Elizabeth’s mother Caroline acts saintly like her daughter Elizabeth. Caroline sacrifices her life when she aids Elizabeth to recover from a severe case of Scarlet Fever. Caroline remains gentle and proper free from anger or blame on her deathbed. Caroline “Died calmly; and her countenance expressed affection even in death” (Shelley 50). …show more content…

Victor treats Elizabeth as a possession instead of a human being and believes that any compliment she gets derives from his doing. Elizabeth acts docile around Victor and accepts that she is a second class citizen. “All praises bestowed on her, I received as made to a possession of my own” (Shelley 44). “ Like Elizabeth’s destruction, the monsterette’s creation and destruction dramatize how women do not function in their own right but rather as signs and conduits for men’s relations with other men” (Smith

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