Theme Of Greed In Frankenstein

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This greed is not materials as much as it is social. The occurrence with Justine’s accusation presents the reader with the multiple accounts of greed, the first being in Viktor Frankenstein, the second in Justine. Viktor has an internal conflict over whether to defend Justine publicly and risk people questioning his mentally unstable or to keep the information that would establish her innocence legally to himself for personal gain. On this topic, Frankenstein thinks, “Justine, and indeed every human being, was guiltless of this murder … My tale was not one to announce publicly; its astounding horror would be looked upon as madness by the vulgar.” This quote shows the recognition of both sides of the conflict in one thought, and ultimately, the decision to withhold the information caused the death of an innocent person due to greed resulting from the necessity to maintain social standings and evade the asylum his mental instability warranted. Viktor exhibits greed throughout the novel from his self-validation of creating the monster in this beginning to his notion that the monster directed his threat at Viktor towards the end of the story; however, Viktor is not the only greedy character in this section. Justine, who many regard as the innocent and angelic maid of Frankenstein family demonstrates blatant acts of self-preservation with greedy motives after her

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