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The Creature In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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When a heinous crime is committed, many people find it valuable to analyze the life of the perpetrator. They want to know how a person could do something so awful. Much of the time, the common consensus of the public is that there is no way a person capable of such a monstrosity could even be a part of the same species. Come to find out, lots of these convicts led relatively normal lives. They had families that never would’ve expected this kind of behavior out of them. Maybe they were a brainiac who excelled at their job, or a funny neighbor that had always been polite and helpful. Yet the horrific crime they committed almost always changes society’s perception of them and places them in the category of “inhuman”. Why is this? It is not that …show more content…

Victor Frankenstein’s life began with his birth to his mother and father. A man and a woman came together and made a life: a human life. Anatomically, Victor was a human being, and this is a fact that is never brought into question in the novel. He also experienced some intense emotions every time one of his loved ones died (which was quite often) and multiple times, was distraught to the point of making himself ill. His mental capabilities are certainly on par when it comes to human intellect. He was so smart that he went to college at seventeen and was such a gifted alchemist that he gave life to a collection of dead parts that he pieced together. The only points on which one might challenge the humanity of Frankenstein are his decisions he makes with regard to the Creature. Following all the horrid things that the Creature has done to him, Victor loses his mind to some degree. The level at which Frankenstein seeks his revenge some people might consider to be inhuman. Travelling to the ends of the earth in order to exact revenge is not fitting with the inherent kindness of the human spirit. This is also something that the Creature is guilty of, but there is a difference between the Creature’s motive and Victor’s. Up until the end of the novel, the Creature is motivated not by revenge, but by the desire to belong somewhere and to serve some sort of restitution for his crimes in the form of his death. Frankenstein, however, on his deathbed proclaims the necessity of finding and killing the Creature, whether it be by him or Walton, who he charges with the task if he does not

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