Hailey Schumacher
September 14, 2016
5th period
Is Frankenstein a Hero
“A Discussion of Heros”
Have you ever wondered what it is like to bring a human back to life? Well in the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Victor Frankenstein created a monster out of different parts of the body. Have you ever wondered what it is like to have to kill your own monster that you created? Well in the novel Mary talks about how Victor had to try to kill his monster after the monster killed his wife Elizabeth. In Frankenstein the monster tries to kill all the things that Victor loved because he had tried to kill something that the monster had loved. In the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, she makes you wonder if the Victor is a hero or not a hero.
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In the book Frankenstein by Mary Shelley shows that Victor got different body parts from the graves. Also he should not be a hero because he went against the law. Victor went against the law because he wanted to make a the monster because he liked to recreate things with science. In the book Mary Shelley says, “we are unfashioned creatures, but half made up, if one wiser, better, dearer than ourselves -- such a friend ought to be -- do not lend his aid to perfectionate our weak and faulty natures.” (Letter 4, pg. 14). Mary Shelley states this in her book Frankenstein because she wants people to know what he did to get the body parts from the …show more content…
The first reason why Victor should not be a hero is because he went against the laws of nature and it backfired on him in the end of the story. The second reason why Victor should not be a hero is because he became a grave robber when he went to get the parts for his monster. The last reason why he should not be a hero is because he did not take responsibility for the monster so it went and killed multiple people that victor had loved and he still did not take responsibility for what he had done. Clearly, Victor should not be a hero in the novel Frankenstein by Mary
Sometimes, in novels like Frankenstein, the motives of the author are unclear. It is clear however, that one of the many themes Mary Shelley presents is the humanity of Victor Frankenstein's creation. Although she presents evidence in both support and opposition to the creation's humanity, it is apparent that this being is indeed human. His humanity is not only witnessed in his physical being, but in his intellectual and emotional thoughts as well. His humanity is argued by the fact that being human does not mean coming from a specific genetic chain and having family to relate to, but to embrace many of the distinct traits that set humans apart from other animals in this
Victor Frankenstein created life, a monster that was born into this world with no purpose, and no one to love. He did not even have a name, he was called a monster from the start. Just like a normal human baby, he came to life not knowing anything, and had to learn from his surroundings. Just like a person, he watched and learned from others, and tried to understand the world and the people in it. From that, the monster understood that he just wants to find a life for himself, and not be viewed as an evil monster, but there are many things that are preventing that. In the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, the author portrays Frankenstein’s monster as a friend through details in his character and his outlook on life.
Victor is also a villain in a Archetype sense. Victor was trying to play god, when he created the creature, and that is something he shouldn't have done, because humans can't become too powerful, even though they always try. Victor became so obsessed with creating life, that it clouded his judgment, and took up all of his time and energy. On page 66, just before Justine's trial, Victor thought to himself, "During the whole of this wretched mockery of justice I suffered living torture. It was to be whether the result of my curiosity and lawless devices would cause the death of two of my fellow beings." This line shows two things, first Victor knew that Justine, and William's death was his fault. Also, he knew that his experiments, shouldn't have been done, and were against the laws of nature and god. On page 39, Victor says, "Life and death appeared to me ideal bounds, which I should first break through, and pour a torrent of light into our dark world. A new species would bless me as its creator and source, many happy and excellent natures would owe their being to me." This quote shows how Victor wanted to be like a god. He wanted to be admired, and praised as a species creator. And this want is another reason he was the real villain of Frankenstein.
Not mentioning the aforementioned sentence of Justine, Victor lacks the guilt he should have. He blames his mistakes on spirits and in one passage he even says, “I was guiltless, but I had indeed drawn a horrible curse upon my head, as mortal as that of crime.”(pg.157). Frankenstein failed to think of the consequences of his actions and he even goes as far as abandoning his creature, pretending it was not his fault something so grotesque and inhuman came into the world. He eventually does try to take some semblance of responsibility but it comes far too little - too
It seems as if Victor Frankenstein is charmed with the thought of death: “To examine the cause of life, we must first have resource to death.” (78) In order to create a living thing Victor must have access to a dead body to analyze the process of death. In other words, Victor is wanting to learn the cause of life by working backwards through an entity that was once alive. Victor talks about corpses with no attitudes of respect: “deprived of life…food for the warm” (78). Victor does not look at bodies as if there were once a living person or animal. The thought of someone digging up burial sites and collecting body parts to create a monster would be classified as a psychopath which questions Victor’s sanity. There is a possibility that there is something missing from Victor’s life and this is the reason why he is infatuated with the dead because he can relate to the deprived of life notion. This notion influenced Victor to do something with his time and possibly he will feel warmth and not deprived of life once he constructs an existence.
In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein we are introduced early in the story to one of the main characters Victor Frankenstein and subsequently to his creation referred to as the monster. The monster comes to life after being constructed by Victor using body parts from corpses. As gruesome as this sounds initially we are soon caught up in the tale of the living monster. Victor the creator becomes immediately remorseful of his decision to bring the monstrous creation to life and abandons the borne creature. Victor describes his emotions and physical description of his creation as follows:
In Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, Victor Frankenstein creates a creature, stronger and better than humans in every way except his looks. After Frankenstein abandons him, the Creature meets the De Lacey’s, a nice little family that indirectly teach him how to read and write. In truth, the Creature only becomes a monster after the hatred that Felix, one of the De Lacey’s, shows him. Before, he had done nothing wrong, but afterwards, all he did was fall down a slippery slope.
Victor uses his knowledge not for the benefit of society, but for his own purpose of experimentation which ends up turning out the opposite way that he imagines. Knowing his own vanity, Victor says "lean from me, if not by my precepts, at least by my example, how dangerous the acquirement of knowledge and how much happier that man is who believes his native town to be the world, than he who aspires to become greater than his nature will allow" (Shelley 38). After creating the monster and all the hardships Victor had to go through, he realizes that a person should be happy with the world around him/her and not try to change it. He admits that trying to become a man greater than who he could be drove him mad and his knowledge went in tow with it. From
Finally, his inability to give his creation a chance prevents him from being classified as a hero. You see with this novel’s alternative title, a reference to the ancient mythology of Prometheus is made. This man disobeyed the other gods and Zeus himself to give man a gift, the gift of fire. Or it he was punished for hundreds of years till he was spared by another god. Prometheus gave humans a chance to live and strive on their own. Frankenstein, however, did not give the creature he gave help to (or in this case life) to have a chance. In fact, he cut Frankenstein off by deciding to destroy the woman he was making to be one of Frankenstein’s kind. He denied his creation a chance to exist on the planet and learn to adapt and use emotions in their life and fit in. He destroyed it after he created it, with much consequence.
Critic Northrop Frye once commented that "Tragic heroes are so much the highest points in their human landscapes" (Frye 1). Few characters illustrate this characteristic of a tragic hero better than that of Victors Frankenstein, the protagonist of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. His story is one of a brilliant man whose revolutionary ideas brought suffering to himself, his family and friends, and his creation. Victor is an instrument as well as a victim to this suffering throughout his story.
Although some critics view Victor Frankenstein as a Tragic Hero because of his one essential flaw, his overambitious desire to discover what cannot be known, he is truly a Byronic Hero by definition. Although Victor is of a higher social class than the average person and his essential flaw triumphs all of his others, he has a deeply troubled past, struggles with integrity, secludes himself away from society, and is a willful individual who seeks redemption by carving out his own path. Victor’s many, deep flaws, which often induce the reader to believe that he is actually the antagonist and the Monster the hero, and ultimate redemption in telling Robert Walton his life’s story make him a Byronic Hero.
Tragic hero’s can come in all shapes and sizes. They may appear as a villain in multiple works of literature. In the novel, Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, the tragic hero is the creature. He is a main character whose faults led to his overall downfall. Often, the creature is misinterpreted by people to be named Frankenstein because he is such a prominent character. While the creature is able to identify the faults in mankind it is only after extreme suffering on his own part.
Victor Frankenstein was well known for his “monster” that he created. He brought something to life by simply using his source of knowledge and materials that he had acquired, more specifically, body parts. Although it was a success, it all ended in tragedy. Both Victor Frankenstein and his creation were deceased by the end of the story. My prediction is that Victor Frankenstein’s legacy will live on and probably even inspire others to create as well. Many will try just like he did to create something that no one has before.
A women who wrote “Frankenstein” named, Mary Shelley, she was born August 30, 1797, in London, England. Mary Shelley came from a rich literary heritage. She was the daughter of William Godwin, a political theorist, novelist, and publisher. Her ideas to write Frankenstein cameon summer of 1816, Mary and his brother Percy visited the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland. Stormy weather finally forced them going indoors, while the other guests read a volume of ghost stories. So there, Mary's story became Frankenstein when she was only 19 years old.Frankenstein was published in 1818, when Mary was 21, and