Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: What Made The Monster Monstrous?

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Britton, Ronald. "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: What Made The Monster Monstrous?." with their own frightening stories to tell each other. The idea of Frankenstein was seeded by a discussion between Mary Shelley and Byron who were talking about recent news of science being able to produce movement from a corpse. Britton begins to explain how this birthed the idea of Frankenstein and relates it to a quote from Shelley where she discusses how “Everything must have a beginning…” and how this brought her new material to write about (3). She later received the actual idea of Frankenstein later that night when she went to sleep. Shelley had a nightmare where she saw the creature of Frankenstein staring at her beside her bed and figured to use what scares here in order to scare others. …show more content…

His theory is backed by two passages from the monster that occur during two sections of Frankenstein. I think the most important passage in this theory is when the monster finally confronts Victor about his actions which include creating, abandoning him, and refusing to create a mate. The monster begins to tell Victor, “I am thy creature; I ought to be thy Adam but I am rather the fallen angel.… I was benevolent and good, misery made me a fiend. Make me happy and I shall again be virtuous…. Will no entreaties cause you to turn a favourable eye upon thy creature … you my creator abhor me; what hope can I gather from your fellow creatures … they spurn and hate me” and does not understand why the person who brought him into this world also has the most hate for him. The monster tries to prove himself to Victor so he can finally accept him by showing that he has taught himself how to read and write. Still he and his idea for a mate are rejected and the monster grows even angrier. This may be Shelley secretly expressing resentment towards her mother who was not around to teach her how to write like

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