Mary Shelley Death Of Innocence In Frankenstein

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By looking at the Frankenstein on can see that Mary Shelley included the themes of dangerous knowledge and death of innocence because the event of her mothers death in her youth and the process of men moving forward, Industrialization. We will talk about her history, Frankenstein, the most famous of her writes, and how to she relates to her monstrous novel. The famous author of Frankenstein, Mary Shelley was born in Somers Town, London, England, on August 30th, 1797. Shelley’s surname at the time was Wollstonecraft, was raised primarily by her father, William Godwin, a journalist, philosopher, and novelist. Mary Godwin, her mother, was an educator and feminist philosopher; she passed eleven days after Shelley’s birth due to a serious fever. …show more content…

Around 1839 her good health was faltering, she died on February the 1st, 1851; her death was believed that it was caused by a brain tumor. In her full life work she wrote six books, including one of the most famous novels, Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus. In the Shelley’s novel Frankenstein it is all about the struggles against Victor Frankenstein and the monster. Victor Frankenstein, once a young Swiss boy grew up in Geneva. Later on went to a University at Ingolstadt where he studied modern and outdated science, he is able to master all of his professor’s teachings. The Monster or the antagonist of the book, were assembled by Victor using old body parts and alien chemicals he was able to come to life. Eight feet tall and hideous to all society his biggest obstacle is acceptance. Elizabeth Lavenza, an orphan and Victor's cousin who is four to five years younger than him, she was adopted by the Frankenstein in 1818. William Frankenstein, Victors youngest brother and the most adored out of the family. The monster ends up killing him in Geneva outside in the woods wanting to punish Victor for abandoning him. Henry Clerval, Victor’s boyhood friend from Ingolstadt: follows his footsteps, and Robert Walton, the man who tries to help Victor, and listen to the both of their