The Theme Of Isolationism In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

951 Words2 Pages

During the late 1700’s, the world was beginning to revolutionize itself with America demanding its freedom and wars breaking out over the world. With all the commotion taking on around the world, it was still possible to find oneself lost within their own thoughts and wandering in their own idea of where they belong in society. In Mary Shelley’s book Frankenstein, Shelley utilizes the use of the characters’ tone, the various settings of where the story takes place, and the symbols hidden within the writing, to portray the theme of isolation and loneliness throughout her world renowned story. With the various characters introduced throughout the plot of the book, the characters voice their opinions and their thoughts. The wording and emotions …show more content…

Walton, an explorer, hires a crew of men to aid him in his search for a passage through the oceans, but says that he has “no friends” (6). Even though he is surrounded by people, he feels alone. His tone suggests that compared to the other sailors aboard the ship, he is isolated among them because he believes none of them to be as intelligent and as driven as he is to accomplish their goal. While still at college, Victor Frankenstein says that “My person had become emaciated with confinement,” (34). Here Victor experiences complete isolation from society. He locks himself in his room away from the people on the outside world. His voice suggests he has little emotion for other people and prefers the confinements of his own room, stating that his own loneliness is created by himself. The creature created by Frankenstein endures the most severe forms of isolationism. “What chiefly …show more content…

The symbols that are presented within the writings of Mary Shelley’s story are able to go hand in hand with the dominant theme of isolationism. One of the most common symbols that is used is snow. A field of snow can be pictured as being wide and plain; Nothing can be seen at all. It is that loneliness that snow represents when mentioned in the plot. For, when snow is brought up in the reading, it directly correlates with the theme of isolationism. The mountains also have another meaning planted within them. Victor Frankenstein climbs up the mountains to discover the creature in the book (69). The mountains always seemed so far away to Victor. The mountains represents the society of which Victor never fully joined. To the creature, they are marked as a home for a desolate and abandoned monster. Another object that had a deeper meaning was the water that was seen throughout the book was water. Victor says at one point in the story “I was tempted to plunge into the silent lake,” (63). The water is death in a disguise. Victor wishes to end everything including his life in water. Death is the ultimate isolationism. With water representing a permanent form of loneliness, it supports the theme of

Open Document