preview

The Real Monster In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

Good Essays

Most people think that monsters are scary beings that inflict terror and pain upon people. There have been many movies created that show how different eras of society have viewed monsters, and the same monsters always end up recurring overtime because society's main fears do not change on a large scale. The true meaning of what makes a man a monster has nothing to do with what that person looks like; it has to do only with their actions and feelings. A man becomes a monster when he hurts others mentally or physically without having any remorse for the other being. In Frankenstein, a gothic novel written by Mary Shelley in 1831, Shelley imparts her idea that monsters are created by society, which means how the majority of people treat another …show more content…

In other words it is human nature to judge people based on their appearance. Frankenstein’s creation, a main character created in the novel, Frankenstein, has become a monster simply because of the way he has been treated by society. Frankenstein’s creation was not created a bad person, but became one because of how he was treated by his “father” Frankenstein, and then by all of the people he came in contact with. James C. Hatch clearly states this in his article about Frankenstein when he says, “the outside of the Creature – ugly and disgusting – is judged by the people he meets to be his inside” (Hatch 1). People assume that humans have a personality that matches the way they look on the outside, so it was expected that everyone would view the creation as a monster inside and out. In the book, Frankenstein’s creation has been watching a family live in their cottage for about a year and he is finally going to meet them. He approaches the old man first when he is alone in the house, and because the old man cannot see the creations appearance he is not frightened by him. This old man is the only one that could make people see the creations goodness on the inside, but as soon as the rest of the family returns home from their walk and sees the creation he recalls the scene when he says, “Who can describe their horror and consternation on beholding me? Agatha fainted; and Safie, unable to attend to her friend rushed out of the cottage” (Shelley 96-97). The creation was, yet again, not given a chance to live in peace with society because of his physical appearance, and he was also not given a chance to let people see how good he is on the inside. This was the turning point for the creation. It is when he decides he will

Get Access