"Sympathy hatred for the monster in frankenstein" Essays and Research Papers

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    Taylor Turntime Marie F. Leblanc Frankenstein and the Western Literary Tradition 10 January 2014                                                           Are you a made man? In Mary Shelley’s (1797-1851) Frankenstein; Or the Modern Prometheus (1818)‚ Victor Frankenstein creates a fiend out the dead body parts. Frankenstein‚ as a product of the Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution‚ is obsessed with advancing the cause of science‚ and in becoming famous and respected."A new species

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    Victor creates a monster‚ but when he finishes creating him‚ he gets scared and abandons the monster. Leaving the monster with no one to care for him so he always was lonely and had an empty feeling inside him. However though he had some qualities that he was just like a human being. For example some of his human qualities is he was very understanding with the cottagers “i had been accustomed during the night to steal a part of their store for my own consumption but when i found out i inflicted pain

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    The Real Monster‚ victor frankenstein Mary Shelley’s narrative‚ Frankenstein is the story of Victor Frankenstein and his creation. “It was on a dreary night of November that I beheld the accomplishment of my toils…by the glimmer of the half-extinguished light I saw the dull yellow eye of the creature open; it breathed hard‚ and a convulsive motion agitated its limbs.(52)” This was the time and the place in which the creature came to life. Victor Frankenstein thought

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    part is knowing that the novel is based off the author’s tragic life. Mary Shelley uses her own hardships‚ fears‚ insights‚ perspectives and passions to form the basis of Frankenstein and construct the characters of Victor and his monster. Mary illustrates her personal misfortunes through the struggles of both Victor and his monster. Her emotions during these hard times are reflected within the characters. Nine days after she was born‚ Mary Shelley’s mother died. (Ginn) She incorporates this detail

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    The Real Monster in Frankenstein The passage at the beginning of chapter nine in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein summarizes Victor Frankenstein’s thoughts on the monster he created two years earlier. The text paints a horrific picture of a creature created by Victor that has escaped and is out committing crime and destruction. The point of the passage is for Victor to describe the monster and its effects on his life in attempt to gain sympathy from the audience‚ but the reader must also note the

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    When the word monster comes to mind‚ especially when compared to Frankenstein by Mary Shelley‚ one would think of a creature that is ugly‚ different‚ violent‚ and an outcast much like the monster in Frankenstein. In this novel‚ Victor Frankenstein‚ a scientist who extremely interested in alchemy‚ creates a creature that is considered to be the monster of the story. Looking deeper in the novel‚ Victor is the true monster because of the scary traits of his personality. Things are not always what

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    Monster Frankenstein’s monster is a fictional character that first appeared in Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel Frankenstein. In popular culture‚ the creature is often referred to as "Frankenstein" after the creature’s creator Victor Frankenstein‚ but in Shelley’s novel the creature is nameless. Shelley described Frankenstein’s monster as an 8-foot-tall‚ hideously ugly creation‚ with translucent yellowish skin pulled so taut over the body that its watery‚ glowing eyes‚ flowing black hair‚ black lips‚ and

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    The novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelly tells the story of an obsessive scientist who pursues to defy nature and create unnatural life. Victor Frankenstein attends a university where he is introduced to natural philosophy and soon after becomes consumed with a project replacing all ties to the outside world and those closest to him. When Frankenstein succeeds in bringing life to an inanimate body he is set back immediately by the botched creation he has made. Without a word from the creature‚ Frankenstein

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    uses language and descriptions to present Frankenstein’s Monster as a naturally innocent and curious individual. The extract is taken from the early stages of the monster’s narrative so it gives the reader a good idea of what the original personality of the monster is like and tells of his first encounter with fire. Initially‚ the monster is presented as intelligent and resourceful. After discovering the fire left by beggars‚ the Monster "watched the operation of the fire" and "examined the materials"

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    Hatred

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    Hatred requires a constant examination of your hated object’s flaws‚ its counterarguments‚ its good qualities-- anything that makes it unworthy of hate. And then‚ you counter those arguments. You crush them. You answer that whatever good the object of your hatred may have is based on incorrect logic and decide that it is worthless. That is why hatred is an overall better feeling than love. Hatred is purer‚ more empowering‚ and more intellectual‚ than love. And that is why our society must be based

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