Life Depicted In Mary Shelley's Cinderella

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Cinderella is a popular fairytale that many people recognize. It is a story of a child who gets what she has wished for her entire life. A small girl loses her mother, and her father remarries in order to provide his daughter with an acceptable mother figure. Many people know that this mother figure is far from acceptable. In the story, the child’s father passes away and her stepmother and stepsisters mistreat and make fun of her by changing her name from Ella to Cinderella. Throughout many years, Cinderella is treated like a slave in her own home by someone who is supposed to love and cherish her. All she wants is to be appreciated for who she is and what she does. Eventually Cinderella gets the chance to be free for one night only, courtesy …show more content…

Soon the clock strikes midnight and she flees the ball, leaving her prince to wonder about who he fell in love with. The very next day, the prince has issued a kingdom wide search for the mysterious maiden who stole his heart. By being the perfect fit in a glass slipper, Cinderella runs away with her beloved prince and lives happily ever after in a castle away from her wicked step-mother and step-sisters. Just like Cinderella, Mary Shelley lead a similar life; however, Mary Shelley did not have the happy ending Cinderella did. Mary Shelley creates many of her famous novels by using her life experiences and incorporating them into her novels. Novels such as Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus, have many allusions to her life and the misery that is included with it. There are many incidences in Mary Shelley’s own life that she writes as parallels to those of Victor Frankenstein’s creature in order to convey the moral attitudes of her time. Specifically she addresses the moral attitudes towards social station, appearance, and the importance of …show more content…

Mary Shelley’s father was William Godwin, a philosopher and author who wrote Enquiry Concerning Political Justice (Robinson). Her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, was a feminist author who wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Women(Robinson). As a child, Mary Shelley was almost constantly surrounded by extremely talented authors such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Edward Trelawny (Aldiss). When Mary Shelley was sixteen years old, she eloped with the famous poet, Percy Bysshe Shelley (Aldiss). At the age of eighteen, Mary Shelley began to write the well known novel Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus (Robinson). As the result of being surrounded by many successful and experienced writers and poets, Mary Shelley writes about the stress encompassed with her company, specifically Percy Bysshe Shelley:
“[He was] from the first very anxious that I should prove myself worthy of my parentage and enrol myself on the page of fame. He was forever enticing me to obtain literary reputation, which even on my own part I cared for them… At this time he desired that I should write, not so much with the idea that I could produce anything worthy of notice but that he might himself judge how far I possessed the promise of better things hereafter

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