Monster

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    called Victor Frankenstein creates a monster that is coherent and kind but later that monster, is going to be reject and betrayed. Victor Frankenstein betrays the monster he created, because from the monster's very first day, he has no companionship, is rejected by civilization and doesn’t have any understanding of the world. There are many ways in which one can say that the monster was betrayed by Victor Frankenstein. He spent huge time building this monster and trying to bring it to…

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    big similarity had to do with the man who created the monster. Both men were obsessed with the fact that they could create or alter life, ultimately playing the role of God. In Frankenstein, Victor let his research control his entire life. He did not talk to his family or friends, he became sick, and the only thing he cared about was the creation of the monster. In the X-Files version you see a similarity with the doctor creating his monster. When his wife is discussing having children he says…

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    to find a way to bring the dead back to life. He accomplishes this but his creation looks like a monster and then because to feel like an outcast and begins to destroy and get revenge on Victor Frankenstein. Frankenstein is not a hero, for he created a creature and abandoned him, he let the monster murder and he let the monster control his life. In the first place, Frankenstein created his monster and then just abandoned him. “I, the miserable and the abandoned, am…

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    Even though we can clearly see that the monster is submissive to Victor when it comes to things that the monster needs, Victor is also submissive to the monster that he has created. Victor’s destiny is ultimately in the hands of his monster. If the monster at anytime wanted to take the life of Victor, he could. Soon after the submissive talk that the monster was giving to Victor, he states “Have a care; I will work at your destruction, nor finish until I desolate your heart, so that you shall…

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    morally so he was forced to teach himself everything. Although it wasn 't right for the monster to blame all of his decisions on Victor, he was right about the fact that he deserved to be nurtured and treated humanely and taught how to live in the real world. Plus, Victor went back on his word when it came to creating the monster a mate. 2. Shelley wants us to realize as readers that us humans are the true monsters. Humans are judgemental and we don 't accept change or anything different into…

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    Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein creates a creature or monster as it’s said in the book. The monster life is injustice from the start to end. For example, the monster is friendly in the beginning trying to communicate with the people around him, considering Victor had left him alone once he was alive. The consequence of him trying to talk to the cottages is that they dislike him and find him horrendous cause of his appearance. The monster was treated unfairly…

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    In 1818, Mary Shelley personified the shortcomings of society’s morality in the form of a destructive, ruthless, yet nearly human monster. During an era in which the Industrial Revolution saw the prosperity of the upper class directly lead to the death and poverty of the working class, Shelley wrote Frankenstein to challenge the presence of cultural inhumanity. Shelley’s novel chronicles the life of scientist Victor Frankenstein, whose studies and ambition lead to the creation of a living being…

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    Victors views on his quest to create a monster from the flesh of the dead changes throughout the novel. Initially, Victor is obsessed with the idea of creating life out of death. Victor is driven by the thought of creating a being from the flesh of the dead and works tirelessly to complete his quest. Victor is successful in his pursuits and after finishing his creation, Victor looks at in disgust and shuns the monster after witnessing its hideous appearance. The monster flees and kills William,…

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    isolates himself from his family and all the people that reminded him of the monster that he has created. We also see isolation in the creation of Frankenstein’s monster in chapters 11 and 12. Isolation is the state of being separated from other people. Victor Frankenstein and the monster isolated themselves from society, but for different reasons and it has different outcomes. When Frankenstein created the monster his intentions weren’t to create something awful, he just wanted knowledge.…

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    As an illustration, after Henry Frankenstein created the monster, he did not run away from the monster as Victor Frankenstein did in the novel. Instead, he does not relinquish and believes that his experiment is not a failure. He is testing on the monster’s physical responses in his lab and is trying to prove his success to professor…

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