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Essay on An Analysis of Chapter Five of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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An Analysis of Chapter Five of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

Mary Shelley's 'Frankenstein' is an important novel in the history of English literature, and the warning it poses is still relevant, with science making many fictions become fact. This novel is about the struggle of Dr. Frankenstein to create the perfect person and his anguish when he realises he has created a monster. Chapter Five is a pivotal point in the novel: all the chapters before were leading up to the creation, and all the chapters after are as a result of the creation. It is also a key chapter in the novel as it encapsulates many of the features, characteristics and themes of the novel.

In Chapter Five the characters are …show more content…

Frankenstein is terrified by his creation; this is shown in the quote 'breathless horror filled my heart.' His heart has almost stopped because of the shock he has suffered. Frankenstein is so terrified he has become almost speechless, unable to communicate his feelings.

Frankenstein is horrified by his monster and haunted by nightmares for example 'I was disturbed by the wildest dreams.' His nightmares are terrifying, provoked by his monster, showing the depth of his disturbance. In hallucinations Dr. Frankenstein dreams of his fiancée Elizabethdying and becoming his dead mother, 'I held the corpse of my dead mother.' Mary Shelley may have used this transformation as it foreshadows future events. It is also a metaphor for Frankenstein and Elizabeth's relationship dying, due to Frankenstein's preoccupation. The use of dreams is significant because around this time people were starting to explore the mind and many believed your dreams are your inner thoughts. Mary Shelley is exploring this concept and suggesting Frankenstein knows his fiancé will die.

In Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein's creation represents an accident of science, and poses a warning to technological advances being used to create life. The monster although assuming human form is referred to as 'it.' It is not given an identity and is regarded as a monster.

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