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The Role Of Women In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Throughout the course of the novel Frankenstein, Mary Shelley makes it evident that women in the Victorian era have no natural rights or societal power. No female character in the novel undergoes any sort of personal development or exist outside of their relation to the doctor, making them uninteresting to the reader. While some of this phenomenon is due to the setting of the novel as well as the time period it was written, it also ties into the natural status and apparent superiority of the male characters. Therefore, most similar male character to these women of the novel and the female readers during the current era is the creature, who is granted no supremacy or advantages at birth. The themes of both Victorian society and the nature side …show more content…

Although her mother died in her early life, as Frankenstein’s did, she left her feminist legacy behind for Shelley to grasp, namely her keystone piece: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. By understanding her mother’s struggle to argue for such a lost cause during her life, Shelley managed to write Frankenstein in such a way that clearly defines the issues in women’s rights, but not so obviously that someone not searching for them could find them. Instead of directly opposing the norm by writing an independent female protagonist, she passively depicts very plain, flat female characters that fulfill the same personalities they would have in reality. The creature is a more symbolic representation of women’s issues: while he is not a woman, he endures many of the struggles that women face due to their sex at birth. This, rather than representing a direct connection with women of the Victorian Era, allows for anyone born of a disadvantageous life to empathize with the difficulties and emotional turmoil the creature experiences throughout the duration of the

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