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The Importance Of Romanticism In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Frankenstein by Mary Shelley was written during the peak of the Romantic Era. The Romantic Era (1798-1832) was a rebellion of Enlightenment ideas. The Enlightenment (1685-1815) stressed emotional restraint, order, balance, and prestige. The sublime, the nature of existence, the importance of emotion,and a focus on common folk, are some of the things that defined the Romantic Era. While it is considered a Romantic novel, it was a forewarning for the horrors of the Industrial Revolution. Moving away from farming and rural areas towards factories and cities, the Industrial Revolution began in England in 1780 until 1850. Apart of the retaliation against the Enlightenment, Shelley’s Frankenstein is also an omen of the Industrial Revolution.
Frankenstein is a classic novel of the Romantic Era. Part of the romantic influence on Frankenstein may have come from Mary’s husband, Percy Shelley, a romantic poet. Mary Shelley wrote the novel during the Summer of Darkness in Geneva, Switzerland in a cottage on Lake Como with Percy and Lord Byron. Mary uses one of the key elements of the Romantic Era, emotion. The terror felt by the monster is not solely do to being different from everyone, but also being terrified of being unlovable. From the moment of his creation, the monster is rejected by his creator, Victor. Victor says he “...beheld the wretch- the miserable monster whom I had created… while a grin wrinkled his cheeks… I escaped…” (59). The creature is eager to meet Victor, a deity

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