Erotic Tension in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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In Frankenstein, Shelley overtly reveals romance and erotic tension, both heterosexual and homosexual, through symbolism pertaining to eyesight, although this subsequent gaze proves the strong relation of death and sexual tensions in both human and nonhuman.

The first occurrence of sexual tension in this story is between two men. Robert Walton, Victor’s “affectionate brother,” says that he “desire[s] the company of a man who could sympathize with me, whose eyes would reply to mine,” and “need[s] them most to support my spirits. I love you very tenderly.” (Shelley 33). Admittedly, instead of expressing the longs for women, Shelley uses the language of erotic desire for a man. Also, despite his being completely surrounded by men on the ship, Walton’s desire for Victor’s companionship develops into something deeper than his other sea-faring friendships; he longs for a man “possessed of a cultivated as well as of a capacious mind, whose tastes are like [his] own, to approve or amend [his] plans,” and “sympathizes with [him]; whose eyes would reply to [his]…” (31). The eyes, like a metaphoric window into one’s mind and heart, imply the origin of desire. Thus, Walton’s wishes for a man’s visual reply, apparently, invoke a returning sexual foreplay and flirt—a gaze. It is noteworthy that Walton would “sacrifice[s] my fortune, my experience, my every hope, to the furtherance of my enterprise. One man’s life or death were but a small price…” (37). Gently but repeatedly mentioning sacrifices and death in a language of erotic, Walton unintentionally links death with his lust. Similarly, Henry Clerval foregoes his ambition to consort with ailing Victor, and “during all that time Henry was my only nurse” (P64) suggesting that, a man who devot...

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...ature’s adoration, Victor creates a mirror image of himself capable of refusing to submit to the patriarchal forces pressing him to become “the husband and the father of a family” (40). Victor’s desire for the monster and the monster’s desire for Victor not only measures the depths of homosexuality in Frankenstein, but also hints that the sexual tensions and the monstrous evil of death are inseparably attached. The monster decides to hunt down his creator and demand a being that “would not deny herself to [him]”(128)—a being that would reply to his deadly lusty gaze.

Frankenstein is a romantic project that fraught with the overwhelming sexual tensions and terror of death, looking through the lusty gaze, the death is to be found. The inherent sexual tensions in Frankenstein eventually lead us to be “borne away by the waves, and lost in the darkness and distance.”(189)

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