The Importance Of Society In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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The novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is the story of a flawed man named Victor Frankenstein who discovers the secret of life and creates the Creature. The Creature physically looks different from most humans and therefore faces many hardships. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is a novel about how judgements based on appearance lead to consequences, similar to William Godwin 's belief that society ruins a person. This idea is expressed throughout the book when people are frightened by the Creature, the Creature is angry at the world, and the Creature feels lonely.
Judgements of society in Frankenstein are very clearly depicted through the characters apprehensive actions. Even the Creature’s own creator is scared by his creation. When Victor Frankenstein
The Creature describes his loneliness to Victor Frankenstein when he states: “I am alone and miserable: man will not associate with me” (Shelley 189). The Creature knows he is abnormal and accepts it, but nobody else seems to accept him. No one is there to understand and support the Creature, which makes him feel depressed and alone. He has no one to teach him, help him, or support him in any way. The Creature knows this and hopes for better. The Creature admits to Frankenstein that he is unusual, but he just wants to live a normal life. He expresses these feelings to Frankenstein again by saying: “All men hate the wretched; how, then, must I be hated, who am miserable beyond all living things!” (Shelley 145). The Creature’s lonely feelings are present because no one in society accepts his appearance. The Creature just wants to be accepted because he is alive and has feelings, but nobody understands that. Many people are frightened by the Creature and therefore refuse to think about his feelings. Because the Creature is lonely for so many years, his feeling eventually bubble up and turns into anger that leads to many consequences for everyone. The Creature was born good but becomes evil because society does not accept him, again, backing up Godwin’s

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