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The True Monster In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Frankenstein follows Victor Frankenstein’s triumph as he reanimates a dead body, and then details his guilt for creating such a thing. When the creation realizes how he came to be, and is rejected by mankind, he seeks revenge on his creator’s loved ones. In the novel Frankenstein, Mary Shelley portrays Victor Frankenstein as the true monster of the story through the use of literary devices revealing the characteristics that Frankensteins and monsters share, and shows how Frankenstein’s irresponsibility leads to his monstrous labeling.
Frankenstein shares many of the same characteristics with monsters, such as his appearance, his selfishness, and his aberrant desire to be Godlike. Victor Frankenstein is described as grotesque, almost demon-like, during the scene in which Frankenstein laments his fury on …show more content…

An example of this is when Frankenstein blames his father for his inherent curiosity of the supernatural, due to his lack of a scientific explanation. This is merely the beginning of Frankenstein’s mastery in denial. When Frankenstein first creates the monster, he immediately rushes from the room, to sleep, and simply leaves his creatio behind. Through Shelley’s description, the scene is anticlimactic, drawing away from the creation’s actual awakening, and focusing on Frankenstein’s easy impetuous abandoning of the creation. Shelley also draws on foreshadowing to convey Frankenstein’s appalling behavior, and to hint at Frankenstein’s viciousness, when he laments his brother’s death by the lakeside: “The picture appeared a vast and dim scene of evil, and I foresaw obscurely that I was destined to become the most wretched of human beings” (47). The novel clearly states what Frankenstein will become: a monster. Through describing Frankenstein’s rejection of responsibility, and plainly hinting at his true nature, Frankenstein becomes the epitome of a

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