Gender Roles In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Frankenstein is a novel about the creation of an unknown evil by one man, Victor Frankenstein. The unusual nature of the monster’s birth in addition to his humane experiences serve as a counterpoint to describe the importance of the roles of women in British society. Along with being companions of men, women play a central role in contributing to the stability of the prevailing social order. In Mary Shelley’s gothic fiction, Frankenstein, the motif of gender roles depicts the envisioned position that men hold over women; society views women as insignificant to men. Initially, the passive role of women is shown through the actions of Victor’s mother, Caroline Beaufort. She is first introduced in the novel as an orphan who is saved by Victor’s
Victor who explains, “...confessed a lie. I confessed that I might obtain absolution” (Shelley), contributes to the image that in the presence of law, society regards men of more innocence and importance. Justine is unfairly accused of murdering William through this "wretched mockery of justice" (Shelley). There is nothing that she can do to defend herself from the horrid accusation, so she is forced to accept to be unfairly executed. Society holds the notion that men tend to have the control and dominance over women in the object of law. In Frankenstein, Justine is put on trial for the murder she did not commit, but because a servant “had discovered in her pocket the picture of my mother” (Shelley), it is decided that she “should suffer as guilty” (Shelley). Justine, as a woman, knows that she will not be believed to be anything other than guilty, which is why she tells the lie that she did commit the murder of William. Shelley creates an acquiescent female character to show that the truth confession of a women for William’s death would have made little impact to the people who were convicting her
Shelley’s women are objectified, used, abused, and easily discarded. The female monster that the male creature wanted Victor to forge is destroyed before she is ever created. Victor “thought with a sensation of madness… creating another like to him” (Shelley) and “tore to pieces”(Shelley), the existence of a new female monster, taking away her life before she even has the chance to live it. The female monster is characterized as passive, disposable and serving a utilitarian function, providing nothing more but a channel of action of the male characters in the novel. The ruination of the female creature is used by Shelley for the sake of teaching a male character a lesson or sparking an emotion within him, in this case, Frankenstein’s demolition of the creature’s companion

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