Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Horror and fear at the emergence of the monster in Chapter 5 of Franken
Mary Shelleys Frankenstein is a work of Gothic horror - a branch of romantic fiction characterized by its focus on sublime emotions. The music genre is often inspired by nightmares with the intent to inspire horror and emotion in the reader. The era in which the novel was written, around the time of 1816, followed a peak of great scientific advance. Shelleys style is heavily influenced by the romantic poets with whom she spent time and her plot was influenced almost undoubtedly by the scientists of her time, who after its recent uncovering had a great fascination with electricity and its effects on the benevolent body. Public displays of experiments were common, something Shelley would have been aware of.The famous French philosopher Rousseau and its setting in the amative Era seem also to have influenced the themes in the book with its focus on the necessity of emotion and the importance of protecting nature, something which could actually be seen as the main ?message? of the b ook. Her book is a warning against the ?over-reaching? of man and she uses the Gothic style to shock 19th Century readers. But what of the modern relevance of Frankenstein? Although the particularised techniques used we now know thanks to modern science to be impossible, Frankenstein still has power to inspire fear in the modern reader, perhaps because, with the advancement of Science and the huge opportunities to ?play God? now open to man, Shellys ideas are just as applicable today.Though told through the triple narration of Frankenstein, the ogre and Robert Walton, the bulk of the novel is told from Frankensteins point of view as he relates his life story to Walton, so that he can learn from Frankensteins mistakes. His narrative reveals to the re... ...ce breeching comfortable or natural boundaries is something which still causes instinctive unease in the majority of people. That human instinct is exactly what Shelley demonstrated Frankenstein was lacking. It was his abscissi on from every natural feeling, the understanding of human emotion on more than just a rational level that allowed Frankenstein to create the monster. This parallel between 19th and 20th Century response gives tinge if not greater relevance to the novels themes to modern day. The arsenal of knowledge now available to mankind to commit moral atrocities is even more extensive than in the era which provoked Mary Shelleys cautioning book. Frankenstein has removed the element of glory from succeeding in pushing the boundaries of science, instilling in the reader a greater celebrate for the true power of nature and for man?s inability to control it.
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