Friday, October 11, 2019
Mary Shelleyââ¬â¢s Frankenstein
Mary Shelleyââ¬â¢s Frankenstein sheds light on not only historical events, coinciding with her time, but the events and problems of current times. Victor Frankenstein is trying to attain the knowledge of the Gods. He is wanting to enter into the world of the creator rather then respect the fact that he has been created. ââ¬Å"The novel reflects a climate in which literary worship of the divine was to an extent forsaken in favor of the awe-inspiring wonder of Nature; the concept of the sublime was, in itself, a reaction to the rationalism of the Enlightenment. Quote from Ruth Bushi) The Romantic Movement was well occupied with superstition and imagination. Science fiction and ââ¬Å"dream landsâ⬠along with unknown gothic characters were often seen in the text and art of the Romantics. Nature and fantasy was the romanticââ¬â¢s speciality. Frankenstein has an usability to appreciate the wonder of Nature, but instead wants to playNature. ââ¬Å"The world was to me a secret which I desired to discover; to her it was a vacancy which sought to people with imaginations of her own. Now this says, in all its power, how Shelley was relating her story to the Romantics point of view and the views of nationalism. One that wants to figure the world out and one that wants to live in the world but use their imaginations, those are the views that created an uproar in the 19th century. Romantics believed that humans had a soul, feelings and emotions. They believed each individual to have a creative nature about them. ââ¬Å"Oneââ¬â¢s individual soul mediated the sense experiences available to all, so that each personââ¬â¢s response highly subjective, unique and creative. On the flip side of that there were the beliefs that Man could create what ever he wished. That Man was God, feelings and emotions did not matter, only the brain. There was also the belief that if man felt enough power he could control beings that had already been created. For example; The relationship between workers and employers. With the power that the employers felt, they believed or acted out in a way that portrayed, that their workers lives and conditions in which they lived lie in their hands. I have seen the overlooker go to the top end of the room, where the little girls hug the can to the backminders; he has taken a strap, and a whistle in his mouth and sometime he has got a chain and chained them, and strapped them all down the room. â⬠(Carey pg 296) This behavior leads up to this powerful feeling of controlling a human. Which, in turn, leads to creating a human. With that view Frankenstein believed he was a creator. This was the war of Man vs. God. Was this defiance of God? Was this biblical? Some say this was wrong, this belief that you are the ââ¬Å"Almightyâ⬠. Victor was charmed by natural science, but eventually succumbs to Waldmanââ¬â¢s lectures and soon becomes not just his student, but his disciple. But my eyes were insensible to the charms of nature. (Frankenstein 50) The Romantics had strong opinionated personalities, in this era they had too. Romantics knew if they didnââ¬â¢t feel so strongly, they too, would be sucked into the unthinkable beliefs of their surrounding peers. ââ¬Å"Such a simple soul inevitably became the catspaw of more selfish and less idealistic fractions. Hughes page 83) Frankenstein is passionate about creating the monster in his own image. Therefore ask yourself, ââ¬Å"Who is the real monster? â⬠The answer to this question is found in the monsterââ¬â¢s story. Victor creates the monster which turns on him. Thus showing that Victor feels that God turned on him, but in all actuality it was Man that turned on God. ââ¬Å"Oh truly I am grateful to thee creator for the gift of life, which was but pain, and thy tender mercy which deserted me on lifeââ¬â¢s threshold to suffer. During the period Shelley wrote Frankenstein the new understanding of chemistry, physics, mathematics and etc. were seen as contributing to a future in which increasing knowledge would give increased power over nature and consequently increasing wealth. Shelley warns us of the dangerous division of power-seeking practices of science and the concerns of humanists with moral responsibility, emotional communion and spiritual values. Everything Mary Shelly is portraying in her writing; Man vs. God, Human vs. Machine and Knowledge vs. Technology, was happening in the 19th century. Everything Shelly was portraying pertains to what is happening in the 20th century today. As we sit here now all of the Man vs. God, Human vs. Machine and Knowledge vs. Technology, all of these battles are happening today. Technological advances of modern science have brought to the light, the opportunity to manipulate life forms. There is also probable cause to believe that DNA replication can be made possible. Wether they are happening in laboratories, under microscopes, in test tubes, in our own backyards, or the very thing I am staring into nowâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ¦Ã¢â¬ ¦. mputers, it is happening. Our utilization of computers has led us to neglect the need for our coexistence with nature. Mary Shelly has, in some ways, opened the curtain and looked into the future. Her portrayals of the destruction of man by man has followed true. The question now, just as it was in the 19thcentury, is whether science and technology are really going to improve the world or make it more difficult? Will our lives become better? As the human race we need to take the responsibility to find the answers to these questions before we self-destruct. Mary Shelleyââ¬â¢s Frankenstein Human beings always tried to comprehend the mystery of creation, viewing themselves as the rulers of nature, who are able to control the corresponding forces. In fact, human science overlooks the fact that there are certain issues which cannot be studied completely due to the limited capacities of human reason. Artificial creation of a living being and intervention into the sacred sense of conception are among subconscious taboos, yet individuals always tried to evade this important rule of the global order.Parental duties are usually attributed to moral responsibility, as individuals with underdeveloped morality show dissatisfactory parenting skills, as their psyche cannot move from infant level. In her novel entitled ââ¬Å"Frankensteinâ⬠Mary Shelley puts forth the issue of parenting and states that such ââ¬Ëeternal childrenââ¬â¢ are often quite interesting and smart personalities with rich inner world, but they work primarily on their cognitive progress instead of cari ng about their social adequacy and adjustment to current norms, including the norms of parental commitment, which appears to the author problematic given the relevant facts form her biography and the transformation of her own view on children from ââ¬Å"killers of mothersâ⬠to ââ¬Å"creatures which can be grown into balanced individuals with proper parentingâ⬠throughout the novel .At the beginning, Victor Frankenstein is introduced as a talented scientist, who finds social norms tense and in spite of being honored and recognized, decides to alienate himself from the broader community (Moers, 1977, p. 156). He needs to express himself in an unusual way, as traditional science seems to him too ââ¬Ëearthyââ¬â¢, so the protagonist creates an alter ego for himself , or, more precisely, an individual, who reflects his own personality just like a mirror. Victor in fact has no evil intentions, as he wills to create a supreme human and doesnââ¬â¢t necessarily want his à ¢â¬Ëchildââ¬â¢ to commit such horrible crimes.The setting of laboratory was selected by Shelley notà accidentally, asà this specific setting influences the first encounter between Victor and his progeny. In fact, because the main character has turned his laboratory into a gate, through which a new soul comes into the world and thus abused the sacred meaning of birth as a solemn event, the creature, born in the realm of test-tubes and rejected by its parent (as scientists tend to abandon the issues, which have been already researched), plots the revenge.Furthermore, the laboratory embodies the artificial emotions and false impulses Victor had at the very beginning of the experiment (Moers, 1977, p. 162). This chamber of tortures, which occur for the sake of science, points to the lack of humanity first and foremost in Victor, not actually in the monster, who in fact experiences very strongà emotions and seeks merely to receive some parental love and care.On the contrary , Victor seems ill-prepared for his new responsibilities: ââ¬Å"I had desired it with an ardour that far exceeded moderation; but now that I had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart.à Unable to endure the aspect of the being I had created, I rushed out of the room and continued a long time traversing my bed-chamber, unable to compose my mind to sleepâ⬠(Shelley, 1993, Ch.4, at http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext93/frank15.txt).Since the time the homunculus comes into being, Frankenstein does not express anything like parental care or love to the ââ¬Ëchildââ¬â¢: once the creature appears in this world, the scholar shows his disgust and runs out from the room, as the process of birth causes contradictory emotions in the man: on the one hand, he is delighted with his advancement, but also feels confused as he really doesnââ¬â¢t know what to do with his ââ¬Ëscientific purchaseââ¬â¢.à ââ¬Å"When the crea ture attempts to follow him, Victor continues his escape thus abandoning his child, his newborn.The extent of Frankenstein's lack of attention to his creature's outward appearance is disturbingâ⬠. (Moers, 1977, p. 163). He is fully aware of the beastââ¬â¢s gigantic size, but does not try to safeguard others from the ââ¬Å"newbornâ⬠, neither he wishes to protect the child from the cruel world.à In addition, Frankenstein identifies his ââ¬Ënewbornââ¬â¢ as a total mistake, an accident and thus shows no compassion to his deformed creature, which requires attention and Victorââ¬â¢s parental performance ââ¬â but gains estrangement and rejection instead. The protagonist finally tears all parental bonds, thus the homunculus can only seek revenge and the satisfaction of his anger concerning the abuser. Shelley therefore emphasizes the significance of appropriate parenthood strategies and methods by demonstrating the outcomes of poor performance.In the similar wa y, Victor neglects his commitment to society, to all those ordinary individuals who are not familiar with science, but really wish to survive in this world ââ¬â just like the creatureââ¬â¢s first victim, an innocent infant who should have been adapted by Victor, as the story narrates. As one can assume, the murder of Frankensteinââ¬â¢s prospective foster child is to symbolize the homunculusââ¬â¢s jealousy towards the individual who is likely to gain more parental attention. The creature therefore longs to take the girlââ¬â¢s place in the creatorââ¬â¢s heart or at least manifest itself in terms of typical childish envy.The creature perfectly realizes the absence of a parental figure in his life. His encounter with the De Laceys, displaces him from his ââ¬Å"natural stateâ⬠, displays to him the family unit, exposes him to education, and to the laws and customs of society. The creature understands his alienation form society. This embitters him and causes his s ubsequent vindictiveness towards society and Victorâ⬠(Moers, 1977, p. 63). So how can the child who hasnââ¬â¢t received any motherly warmth succeed in self-development, including its moral and social aspects? Victor Frankenstein is thus irresponsible primarily in terms of poor training given to his creature ââ¬â the scholar only proves his ability to give birth to a child, and following incapacity of bringing up the homunculus.However, such fathers like Victors are basically (cognitively) incapable of making satisfactory caregivers, as they are isolated from society with the wall of their scientific voraciousness.à For instance, when his homunculusââ¬â¢s power begins to grow, he decides to flee England instead of marrying his fiancà ©e, who has helped him a lot because of the horrifying circumstances of the creatureââ¬â¢s growth. The only thing Frankenstein in concerned about is his chemical instruments, which he is not able to take with him when escaping (Moe rs, 1977, p. 164).The hypertextual transition from parenting issues to social responsibility is realized through the thorough depiction of Frankensteinââ¬â¢s behavior in the situation of adversity: having heard about the monstrous being walking across London, he leaves his girlfriend as well as the huge threat to her health and life: the homunculus could have easily killed Elizabeth. Furthermore, instead of resolving his parental conflict in Geneva and handling the situation, Victor escapes further, to the North Pole, even though he could have given priceless information to an investigator and had the monster caught and executed. Victor thus exaggerates social danger, gradually aggravating the creature with his estrangement and encouraging persecution-related monstrous passion.At first, the theme of artificial creation resembles the demonization of the sanctity of motherhood, which might have existed as Shelleyââ¬â¢s own mental disorders. It is highly important to note some tr aumatic events in Shelleyââ¬â¢s own life: in fact, around 1814-1815, she gave birth to a child, and her pregnancy resulted in a particularly strong physical and psychological deterioration so that she began to believe her son was likely to kill her. Furthermore, the baby suddenly died in march 1815 (Moers, 1977, p. 165), leaving her fully shattered and incapable of coping with the motherhood-related fears.Therefore, the authorââ¬â¢s vision of motherhood is biased by her personal tragedy, as the novel reveals all anxieties of pregnancy, integrating them into the male protagonist, probably because Shelley sought to sublime her longing for pay males back for the biological and social inequality. Notably, Victor appears lonely and forgotten by relatives at the most important moment of his life, when his nine-month scientific experiment turns out successfully. Given his shock and inability to cope with new emotions on his own (such situation was typical in the case of a 19th centur y young mother, who enjoyed little support from her spouse and relatives).Further, when developing the plot and her characters, the writer gradually comes to conclusion that Frankenstein himself is a classic case of an abused child, who did not receive enough parental attention and thus has grown into a heartless abuser. This is probably the core of the bitter truth about the 19th century motherhood as depicted by Shelley in the Gothic style: mothers, who are not ready enough for their new roles, are not able to bring up psychologically healthy individuals and thus continue the ââ¬Å"damned circleâ⬠of generations, imposed by societal morals. Therefore, the novel helps Shelley take the position of an abandoned child and depict this adverse circle of generations, composed of unhappy poorly reared child, who maturate into uncommitted adults. à According to à Moers, ââ¬Å"The heart of the novel is the creatureââ¬â¢s discussion of his own development.The creatur, himself, realizes that a child that is deprived of loving family becomes a monsterâ⬠(Moers, 1977, p. 165).à This means, the novel can be categorized as the authorââ¬â¢s attempt to resolve her inner conflict and eliminate the persistent view on children as killers of women; she finally decides that small individuals are not basically evil, but become violent and cruel under unfavorable family circumstances. However, for the purpose of finding consensus between the conflicting views, Shelley needed to incorporate the distorted sanctity of motherhood as the major ââ¬Å"argumentâ⬠in the novel.In order to appeal to readerââ¬â¢s emotions, Shelley frames the novel with sentimental motifs, which reflect the pain of an abandoned infant. Sentimentalism is also well-developed in the work, particularly during the interactions between Victor and his progeny, when the latter normally expresses his wish to stay with Frankenstein as well as his striving for parental attention and suppo rt. The contrast between the monsterââ¬â¢s overall rudeness and such childish and naà ¯ve requests is indeed striking. Finally, at the end of the novel, Captain Walton finds the creature crying over its masterââ¬â¢s corpse and repenting: ââ¬Å"But it is true that I am a wretch. I have murdered the lovely and the helpless; I have strangled the innocent as they sleptâ⬠(Shelley, 1993, Ch. 24). Therefore, human sentiments are fully familiar even to such violent individuals.To sum up, Mary Shelley, affected by her own trauma, providesà striking and shocking evidence about her contemporary society, where ill-prepared individuals become parents, but fail to pay attention to the younger generation, so the storyà recurs until one of the neglected children grows up into a mentally unhealthy personally, symbolically represented by the homunculus. In this sense, parental duties can be viewed as social responsibility, as they include the application of societal parenting stan dards (love, safety and care for a child), and those who fail to meet these criteria are considered negligent in the other spheres of life, regardless of the relation between these spheres and parenthood. The commonly shared stereotype about the low reliability of bad parents in fact contain social wisdom about an indicator of human morality, a litmus paper of oneââ¬â¢s trustworthiness as well as determine the grade of common respect for the person.Works citedMoers, E. Literary Women. New York: Anchor Books, 1977.Shelley, M. Frankenstein. Available online at: http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext93/frank15.txt, 1993.
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