Comparing Frankenstein 'And A Journey Inward'

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In A Journey Inward, Campbell and Moyers discuss the significance of maintaining similar dreams to peers in keeping one in “good accord” with their society. Campbell states that if individuals possess dreams that are different from the common dreams of their community, this can lead them to either “be in trouble”—becoming an outcast—or instead become heroes of their societies by “bring[ing] a whole new body of possibilities into the field of interpreted experience” (49). In Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Victor Frankenstein’s desires differ immensely from those of others around him, leading him to fall down the first path that Campbell described.
After intensely studying natural sciences, Frankenstein develops a dream that is drastically different

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