Frankenstein- Mary Shelley
Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein makes the reader ponder the relationship between revenge and isolation. In the novel, the monster that Victor Frankenstein created wanted revenge after being locked away in isolation. Hate, anger, and resentment built up inside the monster during this time. To achieve his revenge, the monster decides that killing everyone close to Victor will make Victor feel the same as he felt when he was isolated.
There are some parallels to real life that we can draw from this cause and effect within the novel. As babies, we need the most attention and love we can get for successful development in the future. If we aren’t nurtured with love as a child major negative psychological effects will arise as we get older, or later in life. The child will not now how to communicate with other individuals other then with anger. The child will be plagued with carrying around the deep rooted emotional pain its whole life.
That being said, the creature was excluded from the world by society as well as its own creator. So it’s understandable that the topic of revenge against Victor arises after he abandons him. It makes me think that even though human abilities such as thinking and comprehension far exceed all other forms of mammals in nature, we are all the same when it comes to nurturing and emotions and they stem from a similar place.
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