As most of you know there is always a conflict in a good story, its what creates the rising max and climax in a story. The conflict in Frankenstein is a very intresting, it really grabs you and makes you wanna keep eading until the end. Victor Frankenstein, which is one of themain characters, goes of to college and creates something he shouldn’t have. What he creates becomes a big problem everywher, like at the town where his college is and where his home town is. At the begging of the story, everything is good no problems nothing, life is going good for everyone. Then Victor leaves to college he gets there and after a while he gets an idea in his head. He decides that he is gonna find a way to get scraps from dead people put them together
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley tells the tale of the protagonist Victor Frankenstein and his creation. Both Frankenstein and Frankenstein’s creation’s questionable actions lead them both to be considered morally ambiguous figures. Victor is ambitious with good intentions, but his ambition leads to bad results. The Creature is an innately kind and compassionate person who commits abominable actions due to how others treat him. Their moral ambiguity is significant, as it reveals that an obsession with ambition distorts one’s morals.
Some ways that internal conflict was in the story, Frankenstein is with Victor. Victor had internal conflict with himself about when creating the creature and the death of his friends and family. For example, Victor feels very guilty and that he caused the his little brother William and his younger sister, Justine. William was killed by the creature holding William by the neck and suffocating him. Justine was then convicted for the death of William, founded guilty and hung to her death. Next, Victor’s dear friend Clerval was murdered by the creature, the same was William was killed, this time, this left Victor getting sick and shaking at the sight of his dead friend. Finally, Victor was having a conflict with himself about creating the creature a mate. Victor was wanting the creature gone, but then he did not want the creature to have a mate to reproduce with, then ended up destroying the work he has begun.
Most novels are based on character interaction and the developing relationships between characters. Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein demonstrates numerous family dynamics and relationships between characters. There are many different types of relationships throughout the novel Frankenstein, many of which experience typical society stereotypes. Victor and his childhood family, the monster and Victor, as well as the monster and the cottagers are three of the main relationships in the novel.
In the 19th century piece Frankenstein, author Mary Shelley presents a conflict between two main characters in a way that mirrors a conflict that would arise between father and son. This conflict occurs after Victor Frankenstein, the main character, is completely and utterly disgusted by the monster he has created, despite his initial desire for such a creation, and runs off in a severe state of absolute horror and regret.
In the novel, Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, there are two constant struggles. One is the
Victor Frankenstein in the book Frankenstein faces many terrible situations and has to face many consequences for trying to play God’s role in creating life. Victor seen and dealt with many situations as a young boy that will lead to his madness and obsession with science. Victor has always been intrigued with science and life ever since he was a boy. He studied natural science endlessly trying to master how to create a creature that could sustained life. When Victor finally creates his creature, he becomes disgusted with how it turns out. Victor runs from his creation failing to teach him any social or moral qualities. The creature haunts Victor killing many of his family and friends. Victor will try to run from the many problems he has caused. This causes Victor’s misery throughout the book. Victor becomes the true murderer in the book for trying to play God and create life with science.
Most characters within Frankenstein have a sense of full conformity, while a select few feel full disregard. Victor Frankenstein has the best-and the worst-of both worlds as he possesses outward beauty and conformity while having inward regrets and questioning. Frankenstein had many benefactors that had contributed towards his outward acceptance; on the other hand, he had his inner demons that had placed him in a position of questioned deposition. Victor Frankenstein, truly, is a piece of the puzzle with regards towards the entire understanding of his society and its other human inhabitants. The theme of outward appearance and inward regret drives the character of Frankenstein to home base with obvious examples, implicit reading, and a full-circle
There are many different types of obstacles that life can throw at a person. People who encounter these obstacles have the choice to either learn from the trial that they are faced with or run from it. Scenarios where people are faced with obstacles are often used in novels. In Mary Shelley’s novel, Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein has an obligation to fulfill the creature’s educational, physical, and emotional needs.
In Mary Shelley's gothic novel- Frankenstein, if we look at the term innocence then it has been completely crushed and destroyed by Victor Frankenstein himself when he start playing God and creates life all over again. The part where Victor discovers the process behind reanimating the dead flesh and how to give it a new life, he forgets everything else that is necessary to begin life. It is only when the subject or the creature comes to life; wakes up, Victor somehow start regretting. He first experienced the whole journey of reanimating the dead flesh and creating a new life but he flees from the creature just because of the looks. The creature is a monster but like a newborn child, it has to survive in a world that actually abhors him. The
Throughout Frankenstein, the growing strife between Victor and the monster is representative of a class war. This strife is due to the monster and Victor’s conflicting interests and results in a power struggle between the two. This power struggle is similar to one we see in real life, between the bourgeoisie and the working class, as they have a similar power dynamic (Wilson 116). Since the bourgeoisie are credited with the creation of the working class and have control over many aspects of their life, they have immense power over the workers, yet the workers have the strength in numbers to rise up and resist the bourgeoisie. This power struggle reached a peak during the time of the Victorian Era, including increasing strife between both the bourgeoisie and the
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley has a simple origin, compared to other stories. While stories such as It by Stephen king started a several year process of creation, Frankenstein began simply as a campfire story Mary Shelley shared with her writer friends one evening. Although the origins of this novel are fairly simple, it provides an in depth psychological perspective on the darker side of human psyche through the shifting first person perspective. Usually these darker aspects are associated with the character’s personal struggles, but one specific theme in all the characters. The theme of obsession has been consistent and the central focus of the three main characters Victor, the creature, and Robert. With this central theme in mind the author, Mary Shelley shows that obsession leads to the characters suffering negative psychological and physical effects, as well as impair their decision making. This is depicted through the decline of physical and mental health through Victor’s struggles with his obsessions with knowledge and justice.
Frankenstein a man that was just a curious and persistent like all great discovers and great minds alike. He seems to create this creation as just an experiment if he can do it. The doc wanted to advance towards man use of scientific passions, seem to be playing god and creating life, but, in the hands of man or a creation try to turn into the creator. Dr. Frankenstein main fault is that he doesn’t become responsible of newly created creature to how seem to have a sort of innocence mind influenced by people’s reactions of his ugly physical appearance to others. Victor as well has his faults are majorly problematic as he makes the monster he well abandon’s his creation, Victors reaction of the monster being alive is childish and irresponsible allowing the monster going into the real world blind.
It it conflict that controls the life of Victor Frankenstein in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein - his relationships, work, and even his own thoughts are rife with it. Conflict between Victor and Elizabeth, Victor and Clerval, and the Creature are what drive the events of this film - conflict is integral to the plot, the development of characters, and conflict is what shows the director’s purpose, warning the viewer of the dangers of obsession.
Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein shows the life of an early scientist and the effects of uncovering a truth that has not been known or experimented by other scientist’s. The story of Frankenstein portrays mainly the characters Victor Frankenstein, Henry Clerval, Frankenstein’s creation, Captain Walton and Elizabeth Victor’s future wife and relative. When Victor animates a lifeless object he is horrified by the concept of what he had just done and how it looks. After running away Victor’s loved ones are affected greatly by his choices that he makes along the way, while also changing his relationship with his creation. Through his feelings of fear when approached by the monster, the trauma of multiple deaths and the arrest of Justin, Victor
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein portrays one of the darkest, most hopeless situations that could possibly occur due to the monstrous deeds performed by the main characters in the novel. When one thinks of Frankenstein, they generally think of Victor’s creation as being a monster, and the cause of the unfortunate events that occur in the novel. While Victor’s creation is indeed a monster, Victor is equally as monstrous in his actions. While both characters are initially innocent, they are being constantly corrupted throughout the story. Both Victor and his creation become monsters through their actions.