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Examples Of Abandonment In Frankenstein

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Abandonment is a reality in everyday life for humans and all creatures of life. One might have a fear of abandonment in which they panic at the thought of being alone for an extended amount of time. The novel Frankenstein (1818) by Mary Shelley shows us how someone might have this fear of abandonment and just how it would affect them. A scientist named Victor Frankenstein creates creature called ‘the monster’ from which he made by collecting body parts and piecing them together. Following the creation the monster Frankenstein abandoned him, leaving him to fend for himself for two years. Acceptable behavior and how to support and nurture someone is learned by humans from their peers and parents. People learn to love and care for one another …show more content…

In Frankenstein, Mary Shelly writes what people would consider to be an outcast of the crowd. The Monster doesn’t look anything like the other people and because of this he is shunned. We judge one another by fault; taking what the world has shown us to be as “normal” or “right”. Together as a society, we have made people be abandoned from one’s self. People continuously judge one another on looks, interest, and IQ level. These norms that society has placed on us forces everyone to conform to what a select few consider to be right or “in” and in this instance when you don’t conform to what they say is right you end up being the monster. Most people do not look past appearance; they prefer to judge based solely on looks and do not consider who this person really is. During the book the Monster comes across a blind man and the two become friends since he is not scared away by his appearance. The Monster does jobs around the house for the man and since he is blind, he never sees what we would; the ugly, mix matched body of the Monster. This is a great example that looks do not define a person and that beauty runs much deeper than the

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