The Themes In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Mary Shelley’s book Frankenstein was the first of its kind to use artificial life and humans suffering. In the book Mary writes about how Victor Frankenstein creates a companion which after many years of being ostracized and and mistreated turns into a vicious and horrid monster. Further in the book after the monster fled Frankenstein workshop he stumbled from village to village looking for someone to befriend him and treat him like he’s an actual person but instead he was being shown hostility and was forced to leave the village. Frankenstein then stumbled upon these cottagers and after awhile of watching their way of living he decided to communicate with them. After they saw how hideous and terrifying he looked he was beat and hit after hit …show more content…

He lands in an unknown town and is arrested for the murder of his friend Henry. Henry’s body had the marks of the monster on his neck and when Victor saw that he fell ill again and was kept in the prison until he recovered and was later acquitted of the crime. When Victor returned to Geneva, he married his cousin Elizabeth and was afraid that the monster was coming for him so he sent her away but instead the monster killed Elizabeth. Victor returned home to his dad, who shorty dies a short time later and from that moment on Victor devoted his life to finding the …show more content…

One particular theme is the limitations that science holds and the caution we must have when testing the boundaries of it. Shelley wrote the novel during the “Enlightenment” era which during that time science influenced many pieces of literature and poetry. In “Frankenstein” Victor seeks personal fame by creating a creature and giving it life and not consider the consequences that may follow. Shelley characterizes Victor as lacking moral responsibility for his rogue experiment, as can be seen when he is frightened of the “monster”. This implies that there must be a code or a set of guidelines that must be agreed upon in the scientific community. In today’s society, those guidelines have been set to ensure that such “accidents” don’t happen. On the other hand, the human being is a curious creature and will forever seek reason and explanation of nature. Science is a rapidly evolving subject and the human continue to test the natural

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