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The Role Of The Monster In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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The overwhelming growth and advancements of technology and science has driven the world far beyond imaginable. In the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, a scientist named Victor brings the dead back to life. He does so by gathering the most superb parts from dead bodies and stitching them together, creating beauty in his own image. When the creation is finally brought to life, Victor is terrified of what he created and runs into hiding, leaving it all alone in the world without any guidance. Throughout the novel, the creature hopes for love and affection, but since he cannot get what he wants, he commits criminal actions. The creature’s actions can be blamed solely on Victor, because since he is the creator, he is responsible for what he created and its actions.
Victor Frankenstein creates the creature …show more content…

Eventually, the monster commits a crime, by killing William and Justine. The creature kills William by strangling him because of his relation to Victor Frankenstein. The creature indirectly kills Justine when she is hung to death by using the miniature portrait to frame her for the murder of William. “I too can create desolation; my enemy is not invulnerable; this death will carry despair to him, and a thousand other miseries shall torment and destroy him.” (Shelley 144) At this point of the novel, the creature realizes that he has power over his creator, power to give him misery, just how the creator did the creature. The monster killed William because society had made him a monster, and the only way he felt he could gain revenge was from making Victor Frankenstein feel as lonely which was by killing his close family. The murders were motivated by the creature’s revenge against his creator for abandoning him the second he was alive, forcing him to live in a cruel world that seen him as a fiend because of his large corpse-like

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