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Best essays on "Analysis of Narrative Structure of Frankenstein 1818 version"
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Leaving Geneva for England in order to study, Victor’s overwhelming interest in natural history leads him to a teacher of natural history, who tells him that studying natural history was nothing but a waste of time. Events unfolding after his departure for England contrast Read More…
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Writers in the Victorian era often took a rather gloomy approach to the world, tending to view society and what was occurring within it with a pessimistic attitude, often evoking the same view of darkness taken by the majority of Gothic writers, namely, that it was a representation of evil. Read More…
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The author states that mythology is often thought of as being something that was made up a very long time ago by the Greeks or the Romans and then passed on through generations to become bedtime stories for young children today. The special nature of this narrative is that it is devised to reflect the beliefs of a particular culture. Read More…
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Every human society draws boundary lines between different categories of people, and the fictional works that are produced in each generation both reflect and contest these prevailing categorizations. This study examines the concept of mental illness, sometimes labelled as madness, deviance, or disability, with particular reference to the way that these issues are represented in two films. Read More…
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This review provides a firm theoretical foundation for analysis of the representation of madness in films. Theoretical debates on the subject are summarised, and the ambivalence of contemporary society towards mental illness is explained in the light of these at times conflicting perspectives. 

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Gothic Literature deals with elements that are beyond the understanding of human mind and from this perspective it appears as the most versatile of all genres. Focusing on the supernatural phenomena was a dominant norm of gothic literature since the beginning but in the late 19th century the intellectual fashion of writers received a transformation. Read More…
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Samuel Sprague together with his son, Charles Sprague was also buried in the same cemetery; he was one of the earliest poets in America. The cemetery was established on a common ground hence was taken as a municipal cemetery. The cemetery having some notable examples; the Washington’s and Sprague family with others that will be considered in the course of this analysis. Read More…
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On a more engaged level of reading, Shelley may be observed to have gone an astonishing depth beyond the usual horror story, focusing on characters and the differences between their behaviors, beliefs and values. Such discovery of an underlying intent accounts well for the metaphysically bound essence in Frankenstein. Read More…
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In Shelley’s novel Frankenstein, Victor, for example, is determined to go against the limits of nature, who took away his mother and dog, by creating a monster using scientific knowledge. Science and knowledge do not have limits, and this can lead to the creation of things that are uncontrollable and harmful to the society.  Read More…
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In Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein, there are some intertextual references that aid the reader in better appreciating the narrative and it is connections to other installations (Shelly, 2009). There are palpable references in the narrative, such as the one on the heading page; Frankenstein (Ruthwell, 2010). Read More…
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The aim of this paper is to analyze the major elements in the novel with an aim of interpreting the theme of the book in general. The author's main aim in writing this book was to portray how evolving society embraced science and nature, and how these two aspects influenced the society and its inhabitants. The novel was written between 1816-and 1817 by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley in both Switzerland and London. Read More…
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It is essential to state that each literary work normally is a reflection of the circumstance in its surrounding, comprising social, historical as well as economic circumstances (Rivkin 644). Due to that, it is therefore important, before proceeding with any text analysis to scrutinize the surrounding context.

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Darkness has always been associated with mystery, horror, and the supernatural. Poets, writers, and philosophers have used darkness sometimes personified, sometimes as metaphor and in many different ways with telling effect. Questions have been raised, experiments conducted with science, nocturnal life, religious rituals, spiritualism, occultism, etc. with the intended purpose of unraveling unknown mysteries and happenings. Read More…
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Literature review
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Critical Essay: Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley: the monster as ecological disaster? The story of Frankenstein, which was written by Mary Shelley when she was only 19 years of age, has gripped the imagination of readers ever since, and has sparked a whole industry of literary criticism. Read More…
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nature is: “Frankenstein is a rebel against nature when he tries not only to find the secret of life but also to remove lifes defects” (Rohrmoser 3). Such proposition that like the mythological Prometheus, Doctor Frankenstein is guilty of crimes against nature and God is Read More…
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Shelly’s Frankenstein is a science fiction novel, infused with elements of both gothic horror and romance. She tries to find out the truth of the basic law of human nature on her masterpiece work. The impact of the novel was so powerful that it received widespread acceptance all over the world and became a trendsetter of the same genre stories and films. Read More…
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The highlight of the story is Victor Frankenstein and his revelation that he created a living monster from dead matter. The monster is not visually pleasing and the master rejects his creation, leading to a temperamental reaction from the monster. The monster lacks identity and as he narrates his story the reader feels empathic from the emotional tone of the monster. Read More…
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218). Events reached a crisis point when three American sailors were killed when a British frigate fired on the Chesapeake, an American ship that had picked up some British deserters, in American territorial waters (Roark, et al; pp.218). Though many Republicans clamored for war, the American Army and Navy were unprepared, and Jefferson had resort to economic means to punish the British (Roark, et al; pp. Read More…
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God's creation of man is also considered in the epigraph of the novel that is taken from Milton's Christian classic of Paradise Lost: " Shelley's tale, therefore, delves into the liability of the Creator for the unhappiness and malevolence in the world that He created (Allingham). Read More…
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The recovery phase from the Great Depression is often explained to be the result of Keynesian policies of large-scale public spending in order to let full employment persist and prevent future depressions. This is understood essentially from the phase of government spending in the phase of the Second World War. Read More…
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The author states that Mary Shelley deals with epistemology which is divided into three volumes and each takes place at a distinct time. In the preface of the novel itself, the effect of the narrative structure of this epistolary novel becomes clear and the correspondence in letters between Robert Walton, an Arctic seafarer, and his sister. Read More…
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The role of psychological theories in the creation of literary pieces becomes evident in a reflective exploration of the relationship between the theories of the mind and the motivations of the characters in Mary Shelley’s celebrated novel Frankenstein (1818). Read More…
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The author explains that the created monster was not aware of his identity and eventually he wandered through wilderness seeking someone to understand him. He spent some time in a remote cottage where the inhabitant family was unaware of his presence. When he made the family aware of his presence, the family members were terrified.

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In such case, the readers are deceived by the creature’s ghastly appearance. But Shelly’s attempt to humanize the apparent monster by endowing it with humanly feelings and yearnings for love and sympathy often assists the readers to amend their initial decision to view it as a real monster. Read More…
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Isatu Mansaray-Colbert English Composition II Frankenstein Evaluation Essay April 19, 2013 Inductive Reasoning in Frankenstein Frankenstein depicts some of the most intriguing aspects of an individual’s mind, when it is in its embryonic stages. The plot is constructed around a brilliant scientist who fashions a grotesque creature. Read More…
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of Frankenstein younger brother by the monster is the inciting incident that led to a chain of hurtful actions by the monster and Frankenstein in a bid to seek vengeance against each other. Frankenstein curiosity led him to mock humanity, and he attempted to create a Read More…
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This paper considers the attempt to deploy and perfect techniques of literary suspense in Frankenstein, a characteristic of the gothic novel. Baldick (1997, pp. 45-59) discusses that one way through which Shelley seems to attempt this, is to prolong the inevitable progression of the narrative thereby increasing the element of suspense. Read More…
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It was the time in literary history that is known as the Romantic period and the three men were considered to be the best of the Romantic poets. Sharing her time with such esteemed company gave Mary's keen and fertile mind the stimulation to produce a book of such unusual and yet, poignant subject matter. Read More…
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This paper analyzes Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein”. Mary Shelley, natural philosophy student who is ambitious and helps people in discovering the constructs of a living thing. It further creates numerous essential issues that may influence people’s lives in many ways. The author skillfully conflates around many traditions and the individual imagination. Read More…
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The formal commencement of the war happened on 18th June 1812. When the war actually broke out none of the countries were ready to handle it. A large section of the British Army was engaged in handling the other wars like “Peninsular War” and “Napoleonic War”. The preparation of the United States was scornfully insufficient for warfare. Read More…
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This discussion talks that the book is written in a series of narratives in the first person. The language used is representative of English typical in the 19th century. However, it is easy to understand and its prose is free-flowing.The story has a plot that is masterfully built and has two major characters that are well sketched. Read More…
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That was a time when the US was irritated with Britain’s lack of consent to ratify commercial agreements in favor of America and Britain’s failure to retreat. The French Revolutionary Wars that happened between 1792 and 1802 and the Napoleonic Wars that started after that and continued till 1815 flared up American resentment. Read More…
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These issues ranged from an increase in population within the urban centers, unhealthy sanitary and housing systems, protests, and the fight for rights. This made the government concerned about the future of Britain and the government took various steps to counter the negative effects of urbanization. Read More…
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Shelly's book revolves around Victor’s efforts to destroy his own creation. However, the monster, which threatens to be a new form of life brought about by the man, fights back, strangling people close to him. Victor never accomplishing his mission, as the narrator states that he died on his ship, while the monster enters the deep waters.  Read More…
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In the current corporate world, stakeholders have realized the significance and importance of creating organizational narratives. The renewed interests in storytelling in the corporate world have been driven by the realization of the importance of knowledge and that it would be impossible to utilize abstract knowledge in any analytical form. Read More…
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One of the greatest works in the genre of horror stories, Mary Shelly's Frankenstein has fascinated readers from the time it was published nearly two hundred years ago.. While Frankenstein's monster has fascinated generations of readers, the book itself gave an impetus to the genre of horror story, especially the man-made biological horrors. Read More…
4 Pages (1000 words)
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Mary Shelley has given the novel a hidden message, this message is trying to put across the dangers of pride and egotism, as in the novel Victor feels that when he recreates life he will become world-famous. (Levine, 135) The second message of this novel is that the careless use of science can become dangerous. Read More…
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In the novel "Frankenstein", Shelley managed to create one of the most phenomenal creatures in literary history: the Frankenstein monster.  The epistolary style that the author employs allows the reader to view the circumstances from varied viewpoints and draw conclusions from the plot and the characters. Read More…
10 Pages (2744 words)
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This paper aims at discussing how education might result to tragic consequences based on how it was acquired and later applied in life. The Frankenstein novel by Shelly will direct us in understanding this situation as it Read More…
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It is essential to state that in the novel Frankenstein, Mary Shelly attempts to humanize Dr. Frankenstein’s lab-made creature as a giant. Indeed, though the creature is endowed with every human quality such as love, compassion, sympathy, desire to have a companion, etc., a reader is misguided by its ghastly look. Read More…
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Exploring and critically analyzing the life experiences of the three characters would reveal that knowledge caused their sorrows.Frankenstein alienates from the people and creates a monster that in turn causes him regretful miseries.The human monster faces rejection that makes its life sorrowful. Watson also experiences sorrow for his lust for knowledge. Read More…
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The creature horrifies Frankenstein and he immediately disavows the experiment. As a result of being abandoned, and frightened by the new environment, the monster aimlessly takes a walk through the wilderness. In the process of walking through the wilderness, the monster meets a certain family living there and it introduces itself to them. Read More…
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The narrative is linear following a general narrative structure, discussing how events initiate conflicts and how these are resolved, even if the denouement was depicted first and the triggering events were placed at the end. Kerouac showed present-day events first with Sal visiting his brother Rocco. Read More…
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In the case movie  Mary Shelly’s, Frankenstein depicts what happens black and white in contemporary society coupled with its authenticity. This was a move to portray Young Frankenstein as more scary and horror inclined in his creations (Morton 19), which in this case was the driving factor towards his success in those early years.

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Alienation is something that Victor willingly chose for himself as he was in the pursuit of something greater. The nature of his pursuit of knowledge also contributes to his alienation and he finds solace in his creation, the monster. In turn, the monster has been one of the most tormented characters due to its alienation and unlike its creator, it never chose to be alienated. Read More…
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Literature review
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I have chosen this age group as by this age children should be able to write adequately on their own and should have experienced a diverse range of narratives written for children. I will assess these texts by employing the six part Labovian narrative and Hoey's outline of predictable patterns, I shall therefore analyse the presence and frequency of narrative components, evaluative markers and indicators as well as seeking the pattern and linguistic conventions within the texts. Read More…
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You left me alone; to discover life on my own. I, who was a corpse (or at least part of many), who had no idea what life was, and what to do with it. I, out of love for you, my creator, came to your room, to talk to you, to explain that I needed help, and what did you do? You ran again. Ran away from your own creation, a creature you had created yourself in your ambition to achieve greatness far beyond what had been achieved so far.

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Science is more often than not deployed for destruction. Mary Shelley in her book "Frankenstein" had shown how a scientific creation in the form of a monster could bring about destruction on the creator’s near and dear ones. This Frankenstein model has been used in other works of fiction much later. Read More…
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From the beginning of his studies, Victor Frankenstein purposefully and intentionally turned his back on the natural world as a means of concentrating on discovering the secret of bringing life to inanimate material, a process in which he was “forced to spend days and night in vaults and charnel-houses. Read More…
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From 1812 to 1814, the United States suffered numerous crushing defeats at the hands of superior British forces. United States offensives failed to take the Great Lakes region, and military defenses could not keep British troops from occupying Read More…
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She takes up this issue, and presents her own version of the concept, debating whether man is qualified enough, in all senses, to try and take over the powers of the Creator, and what would happen if he would succeed in doing so. Read More…
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When romance came to be integrated in the horror novels, the genre of Gothic romance was created. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is such Gothic romance which depicts romance in a setting which evokes horror and fear. This paper will discuss how the plot, characters and even the natural setting in Frankenstein exhibit elements of gothic romance, and how it works with the key aspects of science fiction. Read More…
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Frankenstein is different from the other scientists because of the unique experiments he conducts. Mary Shelly wrote this book out of the various ideas she had about cults. Frankenstein proved that science could be interchanged to meet several requirements. Mary Shelly came up with the storyline because of her illusions with scientists. Read More…
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Profound social and economic changes were taking place, including a great number of workers moving from the farms to the industrial towns, giving rise to the Read More…
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Artigas had been profoundly influenced by federalism; he always had had an issue with Elio regarding its discriminatory commercial policies against Montevideo. Artigas led an army that scored the most important victory against the Spaniards who played a decisive role in the independence of Uruguay on May 18, 1811through what is known as the “Battle of Las Piedras”. Read More…
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In addition, this distance between characters can be small or big and it acts as a link between stories in a narrative. This technique of writing a narrative makes the story look more reliable to the listeners. Moreover, it makes the narrative more interesting and realistic (Shelley, 2008). Robert Watson's goal was to discover magnetism.

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This paper will look at the third chapter of Shelley's masterpiece both closely and as part of a wider picture to show that this early section of the novel, written in the early years of the larger Gothic movement, is full of prophetic detail about not only the rest of the story but the rest of Gothic literature. Read More…
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In general, all these narrators have commonalities and differences. Regardless of their variation, they share common characteristics: first, they are unreliable narrators; second, they have intrinsic reasons or purposes why they are unreliable; and third, they subtly reflect the minds and feelings of their individual authors. Read More…
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Significantly, Francisco de Goya depicts, in The Second of May 1808, the commencement of the uprising in Madrid on the second of May in 1808, when the influential Mamelukes of the French imperial Guard were ordered to charge and suppress the rioting citizens of Madrid. Read More…
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Later, in her first introduction to "Frankenstein," Mary Shelley explained the rationale behind the novel: "I busied myself to think of a storyone which would speak to the mysterious fears of our nature, and awaken thrilling horrorcurdle the blood, and quicken the beatings of the heart" (Shelley, 169). Read More…
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The dreadful deathblow to Spain's ability to keep her American colonies happened in 1820, when the troops, commanded by General Riego, prepared to go overseas, revolted in Cadiz (Spain) in favor of the Constitution of 1812, so King Ferdinand VII was forced to agree to the demands of the revolutionaries and the constitution of 1812 was restored.

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Numerous conceptions emerged regarding the relative benefits or limitations of a broad movement toward a 'created' future. The ability to create humans has moved from the graveyards of the Victorian era to the petry dishes of modern laboratories, but the concept and the drive to build a stronger, better man continues in the form of cloning. Read More…
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The British Empire also extended across much of Europe, Asia, and America, but it too is obsolete. While Napoleon built his empire, the British were building theirs, and it is not surprising that the two empires were in conflict. Although the British navy caused Napoleon the most trouble, other factors led to his defeat. Read More…
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The monster grows to despise itself and generates a lot of hatred toward its creator. In order to hurt him, the monster kills several people close to his creator, Victor, including his wife Elizabeth. The story is horrific in every sense of the word, and to have had such imaginations, Mary Shelley must have had various psychological issues. Read More…
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Yet underneath there were strong currents of discontent and a new idealism based on the growing influence of the European middle class. The supremacy of Austria in Germany had been re-established by the Treaty of Olmitiz, which was humiliating both to the national idealists represented by the Frankfurt Parliament and to the Prussian monarchy. Read More…
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This was manifested via the themes such as sublime nature, monstrosity, secrecy, and passive women. Through a series of letters, as portrayed in the novel Frankenstein, Robert Walton narrates to his sister the times he was in England and the state of his dangerous mission toward the North Pole. Walton the captain of the ship had difficulties on his journey. Read More…
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The experience that Victor Frankenstein provided the monster was not factors that can be considered as a human experience because it is devoid of human connection and filled with misery, desolation, and alienation. There was no other way that his monster could turn out to be, but a monster, a flawed creation of a flawed creator playing like a god.

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Student Name: Course: Instructor Name: Date of Submission: Financial Upheavals Financial crises are inevitable and seem to be a usual and reasonably invariant characteristic of such business cycle. The economic system of any country is subject to discrete business cycles that lie on the boom-depression continuum. Read More…
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Napoleon Bonaparte was one of the greatest military commanders in history, and his campaigns have been used throughout the history of war. During the French Revolutionary War, Napoleon became a successful general at the unprecedented age of 25. He was the child of minor Corsican nobility and made himself known and popular during the war.  Read More…
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The following paper is objective to discover the motives of isolation and alienation used in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) and in Kafka's 1915 novella The Metamorphosis. It will compare and contrast those two texts, finding the roots of isolation and alienation in them. Read More…
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The tendency of how can man becomes violent initially manifested when the first monster confessed to Victor that he was the one who murdered his younger brother William. In the monster’s confession, he told how desolate he felt by being alienated from society; that he killed the boy out of revenge. Read More…
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After ten years of wild goose chase he was finally ready to induce life into his creation. Frankenstein asks his assistant (Fritz) to bring a brain from the university. He drops the normal one and steals a criminal's brain from a dead body. Worried about Frankenstein's acts his fiance with her friend and Frankenstein's former mentor arrives the place where Frankenstein was starting his experiment. Read More…
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As the creature watches humans he recognizes his own state, so has a sense of consciousness and autonomy, and learns the language that develops him to evolve from the state of an animal into something more akin to a human. Carol Oates talks of the Creature “educat[ing] himself by studying three books of symbolic significance” (544). Read More…
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In other words, the paper will attempt to examine how Austen lived her life and how she in turn examined and assessed life in her literary works to achieve the aesthetic perspectives required of a work of art which in this case is represented by her six published novels. Read More…
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It can be concluded that director Oliver Reed in association with the writer Orson Welles has used narrative voice and focalization in different ways, in contrast to the set conventions. In breaking with the custom of assigning the narrative voice and focalization to the main protagonist, Reed and Welles denied those roles to Martins.  Read More…
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The research delves into religious and other factors in the desire to abolish slavery. William Wilberforce was instrumental in abolishing slavery in 1807. William Wilberforce joined an astute group of United Kingdom politicians who focused all their time, energy, and money on abolishing the United Kingdom slave trade (Wilberface & Wilberface, 1838). Read More…
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VICTOR FRANKENSTEIN, A MODERN PROMETHEUS. This paper seeks to show how Mary Shelley's character Victor Frankenstein, from her novel Frankenstein is another version of Prometheus, a character from Greek mythology. Frankenstein, in a lot of ways, mirrors the Titan who was punished for the theft of fire for the sake of mankind. Read More…
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The novel, ‘Frankenstein' by Mary Shelley discusses many themes that show the negative effects of social vices such as revenge. This article explores different examples Shelley uses to exemplify different vices and their negative effects in Frankenstein's and the creature's lives. This can help people manage situations better to avoid the negative effects of negative choices. Read More…
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As stated in the introduction, this is not an action that the natural sciences can understand or readily explain.  Although the creature itself was incomplete and longed for human interaction, touch, love, and all of the needs that regular people have, these needs were not provided by the creator/father. Read More…
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From the beginning Mary Shelly was an avid reader of the works of her mother and father works. From there she progressed to the voracious reading of contemporary Gothic novels. Read More…
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In modern times, it seems like there’s less to be discovered, and perhaps all of our minds are so open to new technology that we would no longer be capable of blind ambition. But this is not the case; there is still a host of problems to be solved that makes Frankenstein even more relevant in modern times. Read More…
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Jefferson’s economic policies towards American Indians were initially that of assimilation, encouraging them to undertake farming but when it was evident that this cannot materialize, he proposed a land exchange with North American Indians where they would vacate their lands for the land acquired previously by purchase from France west of the Mississippi. Read More…
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Frankenstein is a fictitious novel that has the strong appeal of being scary and is one of the earliest works of horror fiction. Written by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, the idea of this book was born almost accidentally in 1816, when Ms Shelley was sitting with her friend Lord Byron in an attempt to write a better ghost story than him Read More…
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 The creation of robots to perform some human responsibilities remains the foremost feature of this literature. Upon realizing that the beloved woman was an automaton, the protagonist remains filled with feeling of deceit, failing to accept the reality. The protagonist remains in doubt over the reality of his own fiancée. Read More…
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The author of the paper states that Robert Walton is presented as writing Victor Frankenstein’s story as told to him in the form of letters to his sister. The story as presented by Frankenstein includes the monster’s story which in turn incorporates the story of a family he had been living among. Read More…
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It is essential to state that Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is the quintessential Romantic literary work. Here, the theme of increasing mechanization of man and the humanization of machine underscore a process that moves in the direction of a vision wherein the machine is god and man becomes the slave. Read More…
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According to the report prejudice is usually defined as an opinion formed without knowledge, but in fact prejudice is usually forged from fear of misconceived knowledge. Prejudice is borne from the fear not of the unknown, but of a misperception of how the unknown will affect society. Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein can be read as a tragedy. Read More…
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In writing such a horror story, Shelley was embodying the very idea of self-assertion by putting a public voice to her story, yet by couching it in terms of the first-person narrative, she was also able to distance herself from these events just as the evil effects of the monster are distanced from its creator. Read More…
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Article
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The bricolage comes after Roberta secured her turn with an ‘uh’ in line 65. She never intended to affirm it with a ‘Yeah’ as she was clearly aiming to give a complete and informative answer. Although Roberta’s turn was delayed by some hindering elements, she managed to give Colin further information about sardines and their popularity.

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The declaration of war by America astonished Britain and angered many American citizens, both looking upon it as a foolhardy exercise because America was too young and had not been involved in war, it had only 6,000 army soldiers and 16 naval vessels as compared to Britain’s huge 250,000 army troops and a massive fleet of 600 plus naval vessels (Harney). Read More…
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The novel Frankenstein, a man named Victor Frankenstein is determined to discover the link between life and death, by bringing a lifeless creature to life. Frankenstein pursues his experiment to the end. When his outcome reveals that something went terribly wrong, Frankenstein disregards all responsibility, which leads to deadly consequences. Read More…
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Term Paper
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This reflection is presented in a perfect manner in the character of Frankenstein. The novel portrays an image of Mary Shelley writing her book in the work of Frankenstein while creating the monster. The ambitions of Mary Shelley as a young writer can be perfectly compared with those of Frankenstein as a young scientist trying to craft his own creation.  Read More…
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The autobiography of Frederick Douglass, The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave, and that of Harriet Ann Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Written by Herself, succeeds in bowing our heads in prayer. Both the authors were of African-American origin, born slaves, bonded in the southern part of America. Read More…
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The dates of when the letters were written clash with when Shelley was pregnant with her child and wrote Frankenstein. Even the Creature shares his birth year with that of Shelley’s. One cannot help but agree with this theory considering all the facts which prove it to be, at least, partially correct.   Read More…
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The film analyzed in this essay is Pulp Fiction, which is an American crime film. The movie is known for its use of humour and non-linear storyline (Radtke, 2007). The movie uses semiotics of pop culture. Just to mention, one of the cultures smoking of cigarettes, especially by women, is supported in the movie. Read More…
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It also provides Shelley's feministic belief system at that time. Read More…
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The monster of Frankenstein’s creation has a similar reaction to nature, first finding refuge and support in it and later finding comfort from it even in the midst of his vengeful turmoil.  His first impression of nature is one of enlightenment as the moon rises above the forest in which he first takes refuge. Read More…
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According to the study science and religion are meant to coexist. They should compliment each other. This is because without both, human beings cannot survive. We believe in God because religion requires us to do so. He is the one who created us. Human beings also believe in science, because without it they cannot live well. Scientific inventions make our lives more comfortable.

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For example, the monster has an intrinsic need to be accepted by society, but is instead scorned, attacked, and shunned due to his external features. This treatment is based solely on the notion that he is, in fact, a monster. At the Read More…
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Lampe presents new information about the life of the renowned orator and overturns the conventional wisdom held as the facts about Douglass’s life. The reader is to new information regarding the orator’s life as a slave and fugitive, enhancing a deeper understanding of the emergence and development of the orator as a crucial voice on the abolition of slavery in the mid-nineteenth century. Read More…
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