Women's Equality In Frankenstein

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During the time Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein there was still conflict with woman's equality. Mary Shelley wrote the novel and published it with a mans name. Through Victor, Shelley shows us things that are going wrong in her life and in the world. Victor tries to replicate things like: pregnancy, child birth, and mothering. In the written work, Victor perverts these things, and he fails miserably. Mary Shelley depicts how men envy woman reproductive quality, in Frankenstein Victor attempt to fill a woman shoes failed miserable when trying to replicate things like: Pregnancy, child birth, and basic mothering.
In Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Victor takes one of the most beautiful things in a woman's life and ruins its purpose. Victor's brother …show more content…

In "Home is Where Mamma Is," Suparna Banerjee says, "a perspective that sees woman's reproductive function only as power and equates reproductive technologies to male attempts to undermine/usurp that power." Banerjee makes it clear that science only sees woman's reproductive system as a power woman have. A power that men don't have, and which men need woman. Then, Suparana Banerjee states, "Frankenstein's scientific project is more about the issue of science defining itself by objectifying and mastering nature rather than a male attack on the female's procreative power." She also states that men aren't mad at women for having these child birthing abilities, but would like to master them. It's in a mans blood to be the greatest and be the most powerful. Man wants to have all the power possible which in turn causes conflict with nature and equality (BANERJEE). In "The Ghost of a Self: Female Identity in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein" Vanessa D. Dickerson says, "especially men, are left upstage to play out the drama of ideas, beliefs, and identities constitutes a species of specterizing that is also predominant

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