Saturday, August 3, 2019
Mary Shelleys Frankenstein Essay -- Mary Shelley Frankenstein Essays
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein      An outsider is someone who is not a member of a particular circle or  group of people He/She is isolated (separated) from other people and  regarded as being different such as people looking, dressing, acting  or talk differently. Outsiders have always been around and always will  exist! Because society (i.e. - those who are not outsiders) like  someone to pick on to make themselves feel better or superior.  Outsiders are treated in various ways, sometimes people pity them but  they are usually rejected by other people.    Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein tells the story of a young Swiss  student, Victor Frankenstein, who discovers the secret of animating  lifeless matter and, by assembling body parts, creates a monster that  valves revenge his creator (Victor Frankenstein) after being rejected  from society. The novel fitted into the gothic novel, these novels  were full of exaggerated horrors and when written between the late 18th  and 19th century. This was also the time of romantic movements dealt  with powerful feelings, nature and the idea of new beginnings and  great possibilities. In England there had been great scientific  discoveries especially electricity, these had lead to the industrial  revolution. This revolution threatened people because they thought  that machines were more powerful than they were.    Shelley was born in 1797 she was the daughter of a well known writer,  Mary Wollstonecraft who died while giving birth to Shelley. As a young  woman, Shelley was close friends with writers and poets including  Perry Bysshe, Shelley and Lord Bryran who challenged her to write a  story, her gothic horror novel, Frankenstein was the result of of this  challenge it's narrated by a captai...              ...,  Frankenstein dies, exhausted. The captain finds the creation in o  cabin with the body of his creator.    The scene where Captain Walton talks to the creation and it is a very  moving and powerful one. First, Captain Walton's reaction on first  seeing the creation is quit extreme, he says "never did I behold a  vision so horrible as his face, of such loathsome, yet appalling  hideousness. There was something so scaring and unearthly in his  ugliness". The most moving thing of all is the way the creation talks  to the Captain about himself, he revels his life in a complex was all  his misery, hurt and ambitions........    To conclude in Mary Shelley's novel "Frankenstein", Victor  Frankenstein has created the ultimate out cast. The unfortunate  creation was rejected by his creator, victor, and by all who saw him  and so he lived a miserable existence of an out cast.                      
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