The Pursuit Of Knowledge In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Mary Shelley was a nineteenth century English author who wrote many works including novels, short stories, and essays. Shelley’s most popular work of literature was the novel Frankenstein which she published in 1818 at the young age of twenty-one years old. The novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley has a multitude of themes. A very common theme in the novel are the reasons behind why one may choose to pursue knowledge and the effects that one may face due to this pursuit.
The birth of the novel Frankenstein is very different from the origins of other novels. In mid-July of 1816, Lord Byron proposed to his house guests Dr. John Polidori, Mary Shelley, Percy Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, William Godwin, and Claire Clairmont, the idea of …show more content…

These three characters all experience the pursuit of knowledge in some way. Although the pursuit of knowledge effected all of them differently, considering all of them were questing for different information, many people believe that the foundation of knowledge, in itself, generally affects people the same. In Strangers and Orphans: Knowledge and Mutuality in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein Claudia Gomez stated that, “...knowledge has the potential for community, mutuality, and connectivity, but also the potential to make us strangers to ourselves and to each other” (Gomez …show more content…

The book The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer stated that the depiction of the creature was to reflect the “...monstrosity and the price of her [Shelley’s] own ambition” (Poovey 142). The creator was the character that Sheeley was using to share a lot about herself to the reader. She considered herself monstrous because she too was on a quest for knowledge. In the novel the Victor ran away from his creation, so the creature was required to go into the real world alone and learn things himself. In the essay “Frankenstein of the Nineties: The Composite Body” it was stated, “ Shelley always provides complex psychological motivations for the creature’s cruelty” (Zakharieva 424), which is extremely true. The main thing that the creature was questing for was why his creator would create him and then abandon him. As a newly created being, he was very impressionable and anything that he was taught he learned as fact. For example the creature stated, “[T]hanks to the lessons of Felix and the sanguinary laws of man. I had learned now to work mischief”(Shelley 127) after murdering William

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