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    Mary Schapiro and Leadership

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    Mary Schapiro In her role at the SEC‚ Mary Schapiro was known as one of the world’s most powerful female regulators. She was named chair in the midst of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. As chairman‚ she helped strengthen and revitalize the agency by overseeing a more rigorous enforcement program and shaping new rules for Wall Street. During her tenure‚ the agency’s work force brought about a record number of enforcement actions and achieved significant regulatory reform to

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    the creature where he created it and ran away. The creature is later referred to as a monster whenever he kills Frankenstein brother. When the monster finally meets with his creator again it says‚ “ Accused creator! Why did you form a monster so hideous that even you turned from me in disgust (Shelly 126).” Even after the process he went through to make this very thing‚ he was left by himself in the end

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    The cruelty of society‚ within Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein‚ is examined in various ways. The monster within the novel experiences the world when he is created and becomes lost. Since the dawn of man‚ adapting to society and possessing a feeling of belonging has been an instinct. Many different societies possess different cultures that individuals always try to accustom themselves to‚ from the way people dress to how a family is raised. Those who do not accustom themselves to the accepted culture

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    Discuss the theme of suffering in Mary Shelly ’s ’Frankenstein ’ and P.B.Shelly ’s ’Alastor: Or the spirit of solitude ’. The theme of suffering is best conveyed through the "solitary" aesthetic figure of the wanderer or vagrant. Romantic writers produced works revealing extremes of isolation and socialisation‚ creating ’either a wild beast or a god ’ and proving that although solitude can render knowledge‚ it can also be the cause of deep suffering. Mary Shelley ’s Frankenstein‚ is an account

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    coming into the world. The beginning of all people’s lives is to emerge from a mother‚ whether it be birth or removal. The child needs to be taken care of‚ so they can survive what “is uncertain about the world”(McLeod). In the novel "Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley‚ the relationship between Victor Frankenstein and the monster is an analogy for a dysfunctional family. Victor is an absent father‚ and the monster is a child left to figure out life on its own. The novel shows what happens when children are

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    The Truth of Frankenstein What is the driving force behind all mankind for good or bad? It drives humanity to the farthest edges of sanity and in the midst of it all‚ they lose themselves. Mary Shelly uses revenge as a driving force in her novel Frankenstein. This is seen through the plot‚ characterization‚ and dialogue. In Frankenstein’s plot‚ we see revenge as a force constantly driving the story to stay alive like a heartbeat. While studying at the university‚ Victor is told all the subjects

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    hidden flaw inside all people: the dark side of the nature of society that is not embedded deep inside the unconscious‚ but visible by observant eyes‚ keen to defy that which‚ in hindsight‚ is marked with suspicion and disapproval. Authors Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Godwin Shelley serve the role of inquisitive minds‚ subtly or undeniably exposing the hard truths of a time period in

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    been apparent in society since the beginning of man. When an individual stumbles outside the realm of social normality they are viewed as degradation to society or a threat to normal society.(“Truthmove” 2012) In the gothic tale of Frankenstein‚ Mary Shelley frequently displays the many different forms of alienation. Victor Frankenstein and his creation were two of the characters in this book that went through alienation and isolation. Victor experiences alienation regularly throughout the

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    come to mind. In Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein‚ she disproved these imageries by creating her own scenario with grotesque images and lonely characters. Many have overlooked this novel as a romantic literature but it is actually one that contains the most elements of a romantic literature. Romantic literature emerged through a movement called Romanticism. Romanticism can be defined as a movement in art and literature that revolted against rigid social conventions. In Frankenstein‚ Mary Shelly stresses

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    between monster and human. She has also established the initial trickling of the monster’s inability to associate with humans. In fact‚ the monster’s own creator‚ Victor Frankenstein‚ rejects it due to its appearance and refuses to interact with the hideous beast. The monster’s appearance prevents other characters from seriously interacting with the monster‚ as they form a prejudice against a non-human being. The fear of that which is non-human lingers throughout Shelley’s

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