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How Is Mary Shelly's Life Related To Frankenstein

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Anonymous; the name that Mary Shelly originally published her works under. Originally born Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley was born on August 30, 1797 to a philosopher and a famed feminist. Her mother passed away during childbirth and she, consequently, did not have a formal education. She ended up marrying a poet named Percy. Experiencing much loss in her life, she began writing novels to support herself. Her lasting legacy remains to be her novel entitled Frankenstein, which featured a struggle between a monster plagued by loneliness and its creator. Frankenstein contains components that relate to the life of Mary Shelly as she drew inspiration from her own surroundings, struggles, and personality to create this horrific science fiction …show more content…

She initially began writing Frankenstein as an outlet for her depression. She experienced a lot of loss in her life including her husband and her mother. This fact can be seen as why Frankenstein can be perceived as a reflection of her life; a diary in a way. Furthermore, disease was very prevalent in the 1800s. She used the disease that she saw around her as the reason for Victor’s mother’s death. This connection of death is one of the many ways she relates Victor to herself as she also lost her mother. Loneliness is a prevalent theme throughout the book. Some may understand that Victor and the creature do not fit into society and Mary Shelley was similar. She did not have a formal education and did not get to experience a normal childhood. “I am alone and miserable; man will not associate with me; but one as deformed and horrible as myself would not deny herself to me” (“Frankenstein”). The creature seems to be a manifestation of the many struggles that she went through as a young child and even as an …show more content…

Because of her past experiences, she may have been very lost and angry at the world which is a common and very intense emotion throughout the book. While writing the novel she lost both of her sisters, foreshadowing the anger that is seen in the book. Her selfless nature is also reflected in the novel. Victor’s chase and attachment to the monster can be related to her following her own husband even though one is out of desperation and one is out of love. “My rage is unspeakable… I have but one resource; and I devote myself, either in my life or death, to his destruction” (“Frankenstein”). The display of devotion to each of their counterparts is a prevalent similarity in the lives of Mary Shelley and Victor Frankenstein. Shelley gave up her family to be with her husband in France. They may have been one of the only people to understand each other and this goes for Victor and the creature as well. In the story, she also conveys the jealous part of herself. Her father married a woman who treated Shelley extremely differently from the rest of the children. The anger, pain, and jealousy created by that experience are factors displayed in the true personality of the monster. She may have tried to mask her feelings in public, but in her writing, they are prominent. Shelley used the monster and Victor to create an outlet for the built

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