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The Role Of Monsters In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Society creates unspoken rules and standards of living and those who do not adhere to the rules are considered monsters. It is for this reason that the responsibility falls on society for the creation of monsters since society is responsible for creating the rules and standards in the first place. In literature, and the modern day, it is the creation and expression of superficial standards that creates monsters. In the novel Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, Frankenstein attempts to create a man but the man that he creates turns out to be hideous in appearance. The only differences between the man created by Frankenstein and a man created in the typical sense of birth are (1) the manner by which the men are brought into the world, and (2) the …show more content…
Occasionally, so-called “criminals” and “monsters” are not criminal or monstrous at all. This injustice reveals a pertinent flaw in the judgement ability of society. The condemned that are wrongly accused of crimes that they did not commit are made into monsters that they are not. The tendency of society to jump to conclusions and create monsters out of people who are not monsters at all shows that society is often capable of erroneous judgement. It is mishaps like these that beg the question of whether “monsters” are truly monsters. Since innocent people are often made into monsters that they are not, then are the true criminals really the monsters that they are made out to be? Yes, society creates the monster through the creation of harsh judgements, true or not. That is why some people are able to look past the crimes of some while others are unable to forgive the perpetrator. The monster qualities that are given to the unfortunate bunch are illusions that are relative to the eye of the beholder. An example of an innocent character that is made into a monster is Justine who is mistakenly portrayed as a monster after the man Frankenstein creates “place[s] the portrait securely in one of the folds of her dress”, thereby framing Justine for the murder of William (103). …show more content…
The values attributed to appearance, such as having mummy-like skin, lead people to judge others before they even get the chance to know them. This is seen in Frankenstein through the characterization of the man that Frankenstein created. The man that Frankenstein creates has the best intentions of becoming friends with a family that he observes for months but the man asks, “Who can describe their horror and consternation on beholding me? Agatha fainted; Safie, unable to attend to her friend, rushed out of the cottage. Felix darted forward, and with supernatural force tore me from his father…” (96-97). The man is not a monster at the core but because he looks like a monster physically that is how the family treats him, all except for the father of Felix who cannot see and perceives the man the gentle intentions of the man. In this case the societal values placed on appearance creates a monster out of the creation of Frankenstein despite his pure desires. The tendency of humans to judge appearance before intentions hampers the ability of society to create an educated judgement of the being in which it is dealing

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