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The Importance Of A Motherly Figure In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

404 Words2 Pages
In her "Radical Adaptation: Hypertextuality, Feminism, and motherhood in Frankenstein,” French underlines one of the most prominent themes of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: In the absence of a motherly figure, an underdeveloped or inexperienced individual, whether it be a baby or, in the case of Frankenstein, a monster, will not be able to develop mentally in the same manner as an individual who grew up under the nourishment and care of a mother. According to both French and Shelley, the primary purpose of a motherly figure is to teach their offspring behavioral characteristics they typically could not learn on their own in their earlier years, such as distinguishing between right and wrong, preforming rudimentary actions such as walking and
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