Monsters are portrayed as evil villains who have no empathy for others and often care more about themselves; they are characterized from their traits and actions. A monster that was raised with harsh treatment will become evil in their adult life. The reason for this is a monster who has been surrounded by nothing but pure evil, will be influenced to become evil. This concept is demonstrated in the 1984 novels, written by George Orwell; and Frankenstein, written by Mary Shelley. Both novels include characters that were mislead and shown false hope, thus displaying evil in both characters. Mentors have to treat their creations ethically in order to expect good behavior from them.
In 1984 there is a character named O’Brian who serves under the
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Why did I live? Why, in that instant, did I not extinguish the spark of existence which you had so wantonly bestowed? I know not; despair had not yet taken possession of me; my feelings were those of rage and revenge.”(Shelley, 109)
This quote exhibits Winston to be coldhearted by avoiding his creation. The monster was looking for a companion because his creator abandoned him. Winston is selfish because he thinks of the monster as a threat to him. The monsters source of evil came from Winston because he failed to give him love and companionship. Winston treated the monster as a deadly machine and did not succeed in being ethical to the monster. A quote from the University of Michigan disagrees with the fact that the monster does not disobey its master.
Both O’Brian and the monster where mislead from their birth. An article written by a webpage from the University of Michigan states, “a monster disobeys its master, overspills its margins, consumes its benefactors.”(Introductory Essay to Our Exploration of Monstrosity, Pg.4) This statement is false because, monsters did not disrespect his masters, to the contrary their master disrespected them by not treating them with quality. In the context of 1984, O’Brian was trained to serve the Party. O’Brian gave his life for them and did not disobey them. In Frankenstein, the monster was willing to follow his creator but, Winston abandoned