Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein From The Perspective of Young and Modern Mind.
Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein is a novel of deep ideas and dark themes. It’s a great representation of the complexity of human emotion, the innocence that accompanies the naivety of newborns (in this novel, the monster Frankenstein), and humans' disregard for the consequences of their actions, only focusing on their goal and never looking at who or what it may harm. The struggle shown in this novel depicts the tangled web of human feelings as well as their nature, and as if to be ironic, the monster experiences and shows many of those human feelings throughout its journey. This paper will discuss Shelly’s Frankenstein from multiple perspectives, including Immanuel Kant’s
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From the heinous appearance it had to the mental anguish and rejections, it had to face during its experiences with others. Many of his actions, despite being violent and cruel, can be explained due to the extremes he was put through. The nature of humans or beings of equal level (such as the monster) is formed by the environment they live, in and their experience amongst their peers. The monster led a lonely life due to being one of a kind, and the request he makes to Viktor, that he makes him another just as ugly as he is to be his sole life companion, reveals the innermost desires of the monster. Humans yearn for communication and understanding, and the monster much like humans yearned for it too, but every time he tried to connect with someone he was always met with disgust and rejection. This kind of experience festered hate within the beast, hate towards his creator who left him also in disgust and terror. This hate then turned into evil and became the reason behind the monster’s actions such as the murder of Victor’s brother and later his wife. Noting that these murders only happened much later after the creature had escaped the lab he was made in. And that he spent time spying on people, learning a language, and reading Victor’s notes. This begs the question, was the monster born a “monster” or did it become one after the numerous experiences in its short life? To simply answer the previous question, no. No one is born a monster, and the same is true for Frankenstein’s creation, despite its appearance the creature longed for connection and companionship. It didn’t set out on a mission to be vicious and evil, it simply never learned to be anything else, misguided and forgotten it felt compelled to take revenge on its creator and his