Victor as the True Murderer in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Victor as the True Murderer in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

Mary Shelley wrote the book Frankenstein between June 1816 and May

1817 after a trip to Switzerland in the summer of 1816 with a group of

young English writers and intellectuals, during which an agreement

between the group to each write a story of the supernatural was drawn

up. This agreement was later abandoned by most of the others.

Mary was eighteen when she started to write the story. She had, had a

difficult childhood and this is what many say is to have driven her to

writing the book. Her mother had died after giving birth to her and

she grew up in a chaotic family that included a half-sister, a

stepmother, a stepbrother, and a stepsister, in addition to her

brilliant but difficult father. At only 16 Mary, accompanied by her

stepsister, fled Europe with a married man whose wife was pregnant.

Mary soon gave birth to a child who died within days and then had her

second child who was 5 months old when she began Frankenstein, but

sadly died shortly after the book was published. Mary is said to have

had great ambition herself, despite all the tragedy and disappointment

she met, these are all key points in the story line. She was very

intelligent and during the time she was writing Frankenstein she read

almost 100 books, in several languages.

Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein in a clever and unusual way, which I

think is what has made it so successful. She wants the reader to think

for him or herself and she doesn't want to just give them all the

answers and never makes it clear whose side she's on. Mary Shelley has

framed the novel with a series of letters, using this metho...

... middle of paper ...

...characters. I just think

she wants to get across lots of different ideas to the reader.

Especially the idea of men (Victor, the monster and Robert) being

taken over by overwhelming ambition and outrage and revenge. Also how

easily men's minds can be corrupted.

I think she also wanted to put across the idea that humans like

everything to be perfect and reject imperfection. It's difficult to

answer the essay title because the monster is intelligent and he knows

what he's doing when he commits the murders, but arguably Frankenstein

both created and rejected the monster, therefore he's responsible.

Many people talk about the monster being another side of Victor, like

two sides of a coin. I'm not sure if I agree with this but I feel that

both characters are responsible for the deaths and there is no one

true murderer.

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