Preview

Jealousy In Frankenstein

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
301 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Jealousy In Frankenstein
In the novel, Frankenstein, the Monster is portrayed as a hideous gigantic creature that faces rejection and bitterness from his creator Victor and the society. Because the monster desires to be loved and accepted and not hated in the society he pleads in desperation and anger to have the company of a friend. The monster begins his plea with a question, which shows that he is unaware of how and what he has to undertake in order for his wish to be fulfilled. As the monster continues to plead, he reinforces his argument by constantly questioning the human mankind. Which shows that the monster is trying to understand the behavior of human nature and he fears that he will become evil and hateful like them. The monster states in his argument “the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The monster, although it has acquired the name Frankenstein in popular culture, remains nameless throughout the novel, signifying its lack of acceptance in a human society. The monster’s rejection stems significantly from its appearance, ranging from its "yellow skin" (Shelley 42) and "dim-white sockets" (42) to its "straight black lips” (42) and a "shriveled complexion” (42). Shelley has clearly distinguished the monster, marking the first divide between monster and human. She has also established the initial trickling of the monster’s inability to associate with humans. In fact, the monster’s own creator, Victor Frankenstein, rejects it due to its appearance and refuses to interact with the hideous beast. The monster’s appearance prevents other characters from seriously interacting with the monster, as they form a prejudice against a non-human being. The fear of that which is non-human lingers throughout Shelley’s…

    • 1844 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The monster continually calls out for sensibility from the romantic. The monster has a desire for companionship, and implores of his creator to make him a being of his own species. The monster also desires to be accepted by mankind. The final way the monster displays sensibility is through his desire to learn. He displays his capabilities of learning at the beginning of his creation, and continues to grow throughout the novel. Victor Frankenstein shows the individualistic, mystic, and love of nature side of romanticism. He displays individualism through his desire to be his own creator. He also rejects the help from others, and strives on selfish ambition. Victor shows the mysticism, through gaining power of being his own god. Finally, he shows a love for nature, through taking the time to breathe and admire the beautiful countryside around him. Romanticism is concluded in the comparison of the two characters, and how similar their situations are. Victor Frankenstein and the monster both have a strong desire for love from others around them. They also show great passion for sympathy from others, which they do not necessarily receive. Their situations are unrealistic, and portray the case of non-neoclassicism. Both Frankenstein and the monster experience deep sorrow throughout the entire novel. This experience is heightened when the monster is denied a companion and Victor loses all of his loved ones. In the end, both Victor and the creature share their desire for friendship, which neither fully obtain, due to the circumstances of the rejection and bitterness. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, displays the aspects of Romanticism through Frankenstein and his creature; they display sensibility, individualism, love of nature, non-neoclassicism, and…

    • 1555 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The whole book, in fact, is a questionable motive. For example, why did Victor Frankenstein create the monster? For his own fame and fortune or because he genuinely wanted to create a being which would extend the whole of science's capabilities mixed with his driving force to help mankind conquer death and diseases? But the extract I have chosen accomodates only a few of these questionable motives. The extract's plot is where the monster had been viewing a french family for a matter of weeks and finally plucks up the courage to ask for aid from the elder blind frenchman when he was alone. Hoping the blind man would "see past" his hideous looks and listen to his plea, the monster approached the home, to be met with welcome from the elderly gentleman, however, after giving his plea, the rest of the family return home to find the monster next to their father and expel him from their home not before striking him violently with a stick. The questionable motive I will be exploring is why did the monster not destroy the family or the cottage at that instant like he was able to? "But my heart sunk within me as with bitter sickness and I refrained". His motives for letting the family banish him are not very clear although in the next paragraph the monster begins to curse his creator "Why did I live? Why, in the instant, did I not extinguish the spark of existance which you had so wantonly bestowed?". This leads me to the conclusion that the monster was keeping the family alive as they were the closest thing he had to a family and he had somehow become attached to them whilst watching them for a few months. Even though his feelings were "those of fear and revenge", he still did not quit his retreat and set fire to the cottage as he threatened to do and "glut" himself "with their shrieks and misery". However, this could be contrasted with the thought that the monster might just be saving their murder for a…

    • 2130 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The monster, created by Frankenstein, has many material needs once he is on his own. He is essentially like a baby, he doesn’t know much about the earth or what to do to survive, and slowly he starts to learn. Once he was in the woods he started to become accustomed to the habitat, “I found a fire which had been left by some wandering beggars, and was overcome with delight at the warmth I experienced from it,” (Shelly 99). He started to realize that he needed things, like fire to survive in the wilderness. When the monster sat his creator down, and he told him that, “You must create a female for me with whom I can live in the interchange of those sympathies necessary for my being,” (Shelly 138). Nobody accepted the monster for who he was because he looked scary on the outside, but was kind and needy on the inside. The monster just wanted a friend to be able to talk to and not have run away before speaking to them. While learning from the cottagers, the monster had a need for knowledge. When talking about himself, the monster said, “ While I improved in speech, I also learned the science of letters as it was…

    • 2040 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the novel of Frankenstein, the monster demonstrates a very “mad” character. When it comes to justice or injustice to the monster, he leans towards justice. Due to the reason of his loneliness, he retaliates. The monster has a need for vengeance due to the reaction he gets from people, additionally, he was successful when victor died, and the significance for this as a whole was to be loved.…

    • 316 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In Frankenstein the conflict is perfectly encapsulated in the character of the monster; is he inherently evil and bloodthirsty, or did harsh societal treatment force him to be that way? It is an age-old question, still yet to be solved. However, through her writing and characterization it becomes clear that the monster began life as fresh and innocent as a regular newborn baby. He only became a true "monster" in the archetypal sense after enduring hatred and isolation at the hands of the humans he so longed to be. He is, in effect, nurtured into being the murderer that he becomes.…

    • 1591 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    As his mind is clouded with anger, Frankenstein decides, through thoughts about Elizabeth and consideration for his own possible death, “not to fall before [his] enemy without a bitter struggle” (121). Although Victor reflects on the sorrow his “beloved Elizabeth” may experience if he dies, he is still completely determined to, at least, try to fight if ever face to face with his creation (121). Shelly implies that Victor disregards the consequences of a “bitter struggle” because his thoughts still display his persistent desire for vengeance, to not “fall before [his] enemy.” Muddled with vengeful thoughts, individuals are prepared to withstand any afflictions that may follow the attempts to exact their lust for retribution. This indifference to consequence shows the lack of rational thought within individuals that seek to exact revenge, a clear warning from Mary Shelley. As he kneels in the graveyard, following Elizabeth’s murder, Victor “swear[s] to pursue the demon, who cause[s his] misery, until he or [Victor] shall perish in mortal conflict”(145). With the death of his fiancee, best friend, and younger brother, Victor Frankenstein declares his only purpose for existence is to seek vengeance until death. The lust for retribution ignites intense emotion which proves to be in direct correlation with mental instability. Similarly, the monster’s hatred for all things, including Frankenstein, intensifies his lust for revenge and as a result, leaves him a victim of irrational, detrimental thought. The monster “for the first time” experiences “the feelings of revenge and hatred” and he “[does] not strive to control them, but allow[s]..[his] mind” to focus on “injury and death” (95-97). The search for vengeance sparks within the monster, and without hesitation, the monster allows the feelings of rage to take control, and his mind’s focus turns…

    • 1071 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Has someone ever shown a lack of responsibility in an action and then committed betrayal to avoid consequences for their action? Ethical appeals have been used in stories since their existence and have often depicted betrayal and responsibility. In the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, the movie The Incredibles directed by Brad Bird, and director Doug Liman’s Mr. And Mrs. Smith, betrayal is depicted as the best choice of certain characters for their problems. These works illustrate that people betray others to avoid consequences or a negative outcome from an action.…

    • 1147 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The monster of Frankenstein was denied the opportunity to be good. Frankenstein’s monster was resentful towards everyone because of his father, Victor Frankenstein. Frankenstein created the monster and ran away immediately after he came to life. In the novel written by Mary Shelley, Frankenstein says, “I took refuge in the court-yard belonging to the house which I inhabited; where I remained during the rest of the night…catching and fearing each sound as if it were to announce the approach of the demoniacal corpse to which I had so miserably given life” (614). When he ran away, it made the monster spite him. The monster became angry that his father, the man that created him, didn’t want him anymore and was afraid of him. The monster stalks the De Lacy family, eager to learn from them. One day he decides to go inside and talk to the old, blind De Lacy man, the other family members come…

    • 391 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Frankenstein’s monster tried to become friends with humans and tried to love them. Gregor tried to go back to work and continue to help his family, regardless of his new deformity. However both are treated with hostility and treated as monsters. After a while, Frankenstein’s monster becomes the monster that he is accused of being. Gregor, although never doing anything to hurt his family, is continually treated as a monster and eventually he starts to believe them. Gregor, without his sister to care for him at first, may have become more evil, but those small acts of kindness committed by his sister, prevented him from becoming the monster everyone thought he was. Frankenstein’s monster was not lucky enough to face such kindness. He was never met with kindness, not even by his creator, and because of that he learned how to hate and how to get revenge by harm. Frankenstein’s monster and Gregor were told they were monsters, and were not shown otherwise. After being submitted to monstrous acts, Frankenstein’s monster began to commit them, while Gregor began to believe them. A creature who is treated like a monster, and saw as a monster will learn that that is how they must be, and that is how a monster is…

    • 1114 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Loneliness In Frankenstein

    • 1378 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Some often find it really difficult to fit in when being considered “the outsider” by their surrounding societies. People merely see Frankenstein and Grendel as “monsters” because of the actions done by them. They are two lonely monsters trying to find a purpose for their own existence in their surrounding societies, because Grendel is hopeless in seeking the truth/reason and Frankenstein is merely confused from the rejection he receives and both try to endure through the pain of loneliness. Both feel as if their existence is a burden in their cultures. Though they obtain happiness from engaging in fights and killing members of their own civilization, they still learn to cope with their place within their societies. Instead of giving up on…

    • 1378 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In conclusion, Frankenstein’s creation is a child in a distorted and large frame. He tends to be scared and vulnerable when alone and seeks approval as children do, such as when they cry out for their parents. He also starts off his life unbiased and unprejudiced, happy with the world, even loving his surroundings. Just as young children hold no prejudices until altered by their surroundings as the creature was after he was attacked by villagers and rejected by the ones he loves. Finally both children and the monster had to develop their senses and learn about the world around them through experience. In reality…

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Victor Frankenstein's repudiate for the monster and the civilians reject are the outside elements that concludes in the monster becoming _______ Furthermore, while Frankenstein and his monster were conversing he reveals, “You, my creator, abhor me. Your fellow creatures spurn and hate me” (55). Frankenstein’s monster shunning and persecution resulted in him changing his personality and retaliating because, he could no longer hold his emotions within. Furthermore, his great feelings of vengeance for the society left the monster to kill and destroy. In addition, the overwhelming environmental influences of hate compels the monster to “be no more [so I] shall no longer feel the agonies which now consume me (127). Being neglected by his creator…

    • 168 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The creature created by Victor Frankenstein was very vicious and evil as described in the story. The book creates an image of the creature as a monster that murders people close to Victor. The monster is actually a victim of an injustice taking place. The creature understands that in his life there is no justice, he tries to make himself perfect in order to change his injustice, and the willingness of searching for fairness gives the story a sense of inspiration and life lessons.…

    • 560 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As the world progresses, in all it’s dissimilarity, there is one thing that shall forever remain the same. As every life is made at the core from carbon, and as everything in the world is built upon four genetic bases, so is the law that in order to survive, there must be more than one entity in a species. It is amongst nature's simplest rules that most mammalian species thrive through their reproductive nature. At the core of Frankenstein’s monster, I believe that a large portion of his crippling loneliness is due to his realization that he will be unable to find another like himself. Whether unconsciously, or consciously, he understands that he is unable to do what evolution has told him to. He desires a mate so that he will be able to love…

    • 263 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays