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    Victor Frankenstein and the Monster he created are very similar in many different ways. It all starts out with Victor starting to study the dark science‚ so he can create a monster to be like himself. While he is making this monster‚ he doesn’t realize how ugly and scary it was coming out to be. Victor makes the monster so ugly it causes him to abandon him and sends him away. It is just like what happened to Victor from his own creator‚ which was his father who had abandoned him when he was a

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    of happenings in the real world with an underlying meaning. Mary Shelley understood this better than any writer. Shelley herself lived a tragic life‚ but in that life of misery came a masterpiece of literature that would last for two centuries‚ Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus. While a good scary tale to read‚ one cannot help but think about the underlying theme or meaning in the tale. The tale itself follows a mad scientist who is “drunk on knowledge and possibility” (Franklin Web) that created

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    people in the world have different opinions on what makes a piece of literature a classic. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is an example of the genre classic because it entices the reader by transcending genre distinctions‚ it withstands time‚ and raises a variety of thematic concepts

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    Analyse how Frankenstein and Blade Runner imaginatively portray individuals who challenge the established values of their time. Texts provide us with a gateway to the values and ideals of a given time‚ as it is difficult‚ if not impossible‚ for any author to compose in isolation of their cultural‚ political and historical contexts. They shape the ideas‚ themes and relationships explored within a text and enable us to better understand the concerns and values of the author. In particular‚ texts often

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    undermines people’s actions; while their mind is irrational and lucid‚ everyone is subjected to emotions. In Mary Wollstonecraft’s novel Frankenstein‚ she displays how Dr. Victor Frankenstein and the Monster experience a variety of emotions ‚ feelings of Shame‚ Happiness‚ and Pain are all felt by the two main characters as they venture throughout the story. Victor Frankenstein and the monster both experience shame. For example when Victor illustrates shame is when he decides to create an animated monster

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    instruct us of wrongdoings in society. So what do we learn from Frankenstein? Or is it Frankenstein’s monster? In the novel Frankenstein‚ Mary Shelley compares the characters of Victor Frankenstein and his monster to show that it is not those who are different‚ but those who treat others poorly for those differences that are monsters. Victor’s decision to abandon the Monster based on his appearance is a cruel and monstrous action.

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    The character of Victor Frankenstein satires the argument John Abernethy made in 1814 by calling the result of his ideas catastrophic. Creating life from the “spark” causes Victor pain‚ which points to the danger and lack of authority Shelley sees in Abernethy’s views. When scientists‚ like John Abernethy or Victor Frankenstein‚ assume they are allowed to animate issues of fuzzy consensus‚ such as power of life or death‚ they abuse their credibility and knowledge. Not only does this scientist misplace

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    of literature like Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and Shakespeare’s Othello tell quite a different story. Monsters are not born but made just as people are not born evil but can sometimes end up there. Othello and the Monster start of as good men looking to be part of society but were pushed out because of what others perceived them to be. This caused them to mentally and physically isolate themselves from everyone allowing hatred to take over. Iago and Frankenstein also helped to instill thoughts and

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    Frankenstein: Creature to Monster In the book‚ Frankenstein‚ written by Mary Shelley‚ the creature transforms immensely. In the genesis of the novel the creature felt very alone which started to make him feel very frustrated. As the story proceeds‚ he evolved into the monster everyone set out to believe he was by executing his first unlawful act of murder. In the beginning‚ when he awakens in the lab‚ he was innocent. He could be compared to a newborn child. Nobody would be friends with

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    it with an ardour that far exceeded moderation; but now that I had finished‚ the beauty of the dream vanished‚ and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart.” (Shelley‚ 1831‚ p. 74 (Chapter V – Paragraph 3). Victor is the protagonist in Frankenstein. He created the “monster‚” and then realizes he has gone too far in the quest for knowledge. The rejection that Victor has for the monster is instantaneous; this rejection stirs a hatred for humankind from the monster. Victor gave up a normal

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