Comparing Perfume And Frankenstein's Monster

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It is ironic that both characters in Perfume and Frankenstein are abandoned by their parents and that the natural senses of those people are utilized in the stories. Both narrations have nature versus nurture situation. Both characters were neglected by their biological parents after birth. Due to the inability of Grenouille to generate a natural scent and the unsightly and grotesque appearance of Frankenstein, both of them were deserted by the society and their peers. The motive for their murders was totally different, but both wanted to be embraced by their respective communities as normal individuals rather than being snubbed due to their looks and smell; or lack thereof.
Motives for Killing for Grenouille and Frankenstein's Monster
Based on the Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, the society has developed the Frankenstein effect, whereby the society creates its monsters within the communities. Were they monsters since the beginning or did the society create them? Mary Shelly indicates the obsessive and compulsive conduct of Victor Frankenstein to finish his work regardless of the situation. She also shows him as …show more content…

These entail the shadow, the animus, and the anima. The shadow is a moral challenge that strains the entire ego personality since an individual could be conscious of the shadow with no significant moral effort (Headey, 2008). To become conscious of it entails identifying the dark feature of the personality as real and present. A closer evaluation of the dark aspect which is the inferiorities comprising the shadow indicates that they possess an emotional aspect which is a kind of autonomy and accordingly possessive or obsessive quality. Soon after the creature was brought into consciousness, Victor Frankenstein sprints away from himself. Victor is sprinting away from his own shadow which is the dark

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