Internal struggles are common enough that everyone has experienced it at some point or another throughout their lives. Whether a person deals with an internal struggle alone or if they find an outlet is based on the individual. Many people, however do search for outside assistance rather than struggle with the problem on their own. There are some, though who chose to keep the internal struggle to themselves. Moreover, building a solitary confinement with which to keep themselves in. Solitude has negative effects on an individual with internal struggles, however proper support and guidance will alleviate it.…
In her novel Frankenstein, Mary Shelley explores a wide range of themes concerning human nature through the thoughts and actions of two main characters and a host of others. Two themes are at the heart of the story, the most important being creation, but emphasis is also placed on alienation from society. These two themes are relevant even in today's society as technology brings us ever closer to Frankenstein's fictional achievement.…
Throughout the novel, The Monster is characterized as a sensitive being; he wants to be loved and resents the fact that he was rejected by Frankenstein. As he gains knowledge and begins to grow more intelligent, The Monster comes to the realization that Victor abandoned him, that he is unwanted. This frustrates him as he continually gets rejected by society. Although Victor seems to think very highly of himself, The Monster has a very low self-esteem, “I, the miserable and the abandoned, am an abortion, to be spurned at, and kicked, and trampled on” (pg #), which stems from his rejection by both Victor and society as a whole. This character trait of The Monster makes the sort of selfishness of Victor, as it shows that, in his search for fame and glory, he was uncaring of the consequences. In creating The Monster, Victor’s intentions were not what they should have been; instead of trying to create life in order to make the world better, he was doing is for the sole purpose of becoming a God-like person. His God-complex is apparent in other parts of the novel as well, when he meets The Monster in the mountains and they have a conversation about Victor’s want to destroy The…
When Victor Frankenstein first saw the creature alive, it wasn’t what he had expected it to be. The creature didn’t look like how Victor imagined it would look like, because Victor expected the creature to look beautiful and the creature turned out completely different. Victor instantly tries to ignore the creature and leaves, “unable to endure the aspect of the being i had create, i rush out of the room and continued a long time traversing my bed-chamber…” said Victor (page 49). Victor runs away from the creature instead of confronting him. The least victor could have done was at least talk to the creature or even destroy him. Victor didn’t listen to the creature or give him any of his attention.…
In “Frankenstein,” Victor endures several types of imprisonment. His workshop is much like a prison cell, in that he stays in the room for months at a time and leaves only for brief stretches. Victor admits that, “My cheek had grown pale with study, and my person had become emaciated with confinement” (Shelly 32). Victor is literally imprisoned by the authorities for the murder of his best friend, Henry Clerval. He is metaphorically imprisoned by his inability to protect his loved ones, including his future wife, from his monster. He reveals the dread created by his powerlessness when he says, “And then I thought again of his words- I will be with you on your wedding-night” (Shelly 117). Victor’s fear of social ostracism, which would be the likely outcome if anyone of his class were to discover that he had created the repulsive monster that had killed so many innocent people, also impairs his actions. It is only after he decides to hunt down the monster and vanquish him in order to ease his conscience that Victor breaks free from the prison that his fears create for him. Although Victor dies before avenging his loved ones, his death is what ultimately releases him from this prison.…
Anxiety Disorder is a condition that is diagnosed as the disability to cope with any form of stress. Since it is one of the most common disorders in the U.S., there are a large amount of people that have and will need to control this illness. As one of the many people in the world, Victor, the main character in Frankenstein by Mary Shelly, had such a severe case of anxiety that he was almost driven to insanity. During the story, you follow his battle with this disorder. He had a constant obsession with trying to get away from the creature, and was overly stressed about this monster that he had created that ultimately he couldn’t deal with his actual problem at hand. Anxiety disorder is extremely difficult to deal with, but if the proper steps are taken, it is treatable.…
This is exactly what happens to Victor when he becomes so focused on making the creature rather than being in the real world. He also explains that “this crisis” of technology taking over our lives “leads to a general realization about our technology: that it is us” (Vargish). He argues that humans are at fault for the huge technological advances going on today and that it has gone too far, due to the drive to discover. He also argues that it represents our true aspirations in life. For instance, Vargish shows how Victor abuses technology for his own personal gain as he argues that “he plans to employ his new technology to create a race of dependents who will worship and praise him” (Vargish). This shows that Victor uses technology for what he is truly after-worship and praise. Vargish argues that Victor is more concerned about his pride than making the creature. This behavior is much better represented by the creature rather than Victor, which demonstrates how crossing the line with technology and especially for the sake of pride can lead to big consequences. Due to Victor’s pride, the creature that he regrets creating in the first place, becomes an attention seeking monster reflecting who Victor really is, or as Vargish stated “Frankenstein's monster is Frankenstein; the creation expresses the creator”…
In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein becomes consumed with the act of creating of a living thing from dead body parts and electricity. His relentless ambition clouds his judgment and reason ultimately leading him to go against the natural order of life and create a new species. After creating the monster, Victor is disgusted by what he has done and rejects the monster, forcing him to fend for himself in the outside world. This isolation and rejection from his father or God leads the creature to become very unstable. He commits heinous acts on Victor’s loved ones as well as innocent people. It can be argued that he is not entirely at fault for his actions. Rather that it is a combination of Victor, society, and his own personal…
Discuss the theme of suffering in Mary Shelly 's 'Frankenstein ' and P.B.Shelly 's 'Alastor: Or the spirit of solitude '.…
At the end of this quote he even says he wans to destroy the cottage and the cottagers, but then sticks to burning the cottage down. The creation is full of revenge and therefore other things become collateral damage and lead to terrible outcomes. All this prejudice against the creature from Victor, the cottagers and society it pushes him to demand that victor makes him a companion. He confront Victor explaining how he feels, “I am alone and miserable: man will not associate with me; but one as deformed and horrible as myself would not deny herself to me. My companion must be of the same species and have the same defects. This being you must create.”(Frankenstein 135). The creation has now become delirious and very threatening all because people were prejudice against him. This leads the creation to next go on a rampage of killing Victors loved ones, by the end of the book Victor is in a delirious rage but the novel shows the reader that being prejudice has serious…
In the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, a man by the name of Victor Frankenstein creates this hideous monster that turns out to be the bad guy. In this book, Victor has a great passion for creating this monster but then becomes afraid of his responsibilities once the monster turns into a reality. He had quite a few responsibilities, for example: he was supposed to make sure nobody got hurt, make sure that the monster was kept a secBut once the monster becomes a reality he now has a responsibility to the monster, but he doesn’t accept or fulfill that responsibility. Victor does not accept this responsibility because when he was creating the monster he did not really think everything through, as in he was only thinking about making the monster,…
Robin wood explains how their are different versions of the other, the version that applies to Frankenstein is the proletariat. “The proletariat—insofar as it still has any autonomous existence and has escaped its colonization by bourgeois ideology. It remains, at least, a conveniently available object for projection: the bourgeois obsession with cleanliness, which psychoanalysis shows to be an outward symptom closely associated with sexual repression, and bourgeois sexual repression itself, find their inverse reflections in the myths of working-class squalor and sexuality.” In this quote Robin Wood is saying, the otherness of the working - class people such as a scientist, who usually do the "dirty jobs", is due to the common obsession with…
Regarding the question, “Do you think that this [Victor’s tragic fate] is the true cause of his suffering? Yes, the answer to question is very much so true. His suffering is due to the fact that he relentlessly searched for knowledge. He worked night and day to the point of sickness for his cause. His quote even shows how dedicated he is to fulfilling his scientific goal. Victor says, “One man’s life or death were but a small price to pay for the acquirement of knowledge which I sought, for the dominion I should acquire and transmit over the elemental foes of our race.” (Letter 4.21)…
Throughout the monster’s development he is constantly antagonized by Victor for his destructive behavior, however he never concedes that his nature morphed his mentality. Frankenstein’s creation of the monster begins with intentions of reanimating what was once pronounced dead. The obsession of creating science fiction into reality is one that Victor has buried deep within his ambitions with an assumed usage to unearth the darkest omens of science. Following the storyline, Victor, who now holds necessary assets to perform the study, embarks on his endeavors towards creating an insentient being. Consequently, the mental desolation he discerns breaks away at the very fibers of his morals and mentality over the span of 2 years. Through the magics…
Victor Frankenstein does not make the monster out of the fascination of life and death. He had become consumed by his quest for greatness, a mission to have his named passed through generations as the man who had created life. Victor creates the monster for the sake of pure glory, for immortality, both in the name and liberty. Victor says "A new species would bless me as its creator and source’’(Shelley100). He also creates the monster for the idea of being able to bestow life upon himself. Truly his motives are selfish and, as he created the monster, he thought nothing of what would do with the monster after was created, bore absolutely no responsibility in…