Frankenstein1
Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley is a complex novel that was written during the age of Romanticism. It contains many typical themes of a common Romantic novel such as dark laboratories, the moon, and a monster; however, Frankenstein is anything but a common novel. Many lessons are embedded into this novel, including how society acts towards the different. The monster fell victim to the system commonly used to characterize a person by only his or her outer appearance. Whether people like it or not, society always summarizes a person's characteristics by his or her physical appearance. Society has set an unbreakable code individuals must follow to be accepted. Those who don't follow the "standard" are hated by the crowd and banned for the reason of being different. When the monster ventured into a town"...[monster] had hardly placed [his] foot within the door ...children shrieked, and ...women fainted" (101). From that moment on he realized that people did not like his appearance and hated him because of it. If villa
But haunting images of his creation (from the monster's first moment of life) gave him an instinctive feeling that the monster would do menacing acts with his companion, wreaking twice the havoc! Reoccurring images of painful events originating from a first encounter could fill a person with hate and destruction. We as a society are the ones responsible for the transformation of the once child-like creature into the monster we all know. In a way the monster started out with a child-like innocence that was eventually shattered by being constantly rejected by society time after time. The public needs to know that our society has flaws and they must be removed before our primal instincts continue to isolate and hurt the people who are different. He knew that it could have been possible because the old man was blind, he could not see the monster's repulsive characteristics. " (97) were and decided that he had to make another creature, a companion for the original. If physical appearance were not important then the creature would have had a chance of being accepted into the community with love and care.
Common topics in this essay:
Victor Frankenstein,
De Lacey,
Mary Shelley,
physical appearance,
encounter humans,
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