Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Frankenstein: Shelley Use of Mascuine and Feminine Roles :: Free Essay Writer
Frankenstein: Shelley Use of Mascuine and Feminine Roles Shelley began writing ââ¬ËFrankensteinââ¬â¢ in the company of what has been called ââ¬Ëher male coterieââ¬â¢, including her lover Percy Shelley, Lord Byron and his physician John Polidori. It has been suggested that the influence of this group, and particularly that of Shelley and Byron, affected her portrayal of male characters in the novel. As Ann Campbell writes: ââ¬Ë[The] characters and plot of Frankenstein reflect . . . Shelleyââ¬â¢s conflicted feelings about the masculine circle which surrounded her.ââ¬â¢ Certainly the male characters in ââ¬ËFrankensteinââ¬â¢ are more developed that those of the females. Elizabeth Fay has suggested that the female characters are ââ¬Ëidealised figuresââ¬â¢ in much of Shelleyââ¬â¢s work, particularly in the descriptions of Caroline and Elizabeth, the two mother figures in the novel. Caroline is, on surface value, a perfect parent, together with her husband, which renders Victorââ¬â¢s irresponsibility in abandoning the creature more unforgivable. She ââ¬Ëpossessed a mind of uncommon mouldââ¬â¢ which was also ââ¬Ësoft and benevolentââ¬â¢; she is compared to a ââ¬Ëfair exoticââ¬â¢ flower which is sheltered by Alphonse; she drew ââ¬Ëinexhaustible stores of affection from a very mine of love to bestowââ¬â¢ on Victor, and her ââ¬Ëtender caressesââ¬â¢ are some of his ââ¬Ëfirst recollectionsââ¬â¢. She is the idealised mother, a figure that Shelley viewed wistfully, as her own mother died when she was ten days old to be replaced by a disinterested stepmother. Carolineââ¬â¢s parenting provides the care that Frankenstein might well have lacked, had he been left to his father alone ââ¬â his father dismisses Agrippaââ¬â¢s work without explanation, thereby setting Victor on his course towards ââ¬Ëdestructionââ¬â¢. This is the first introduction of a theme that continues throughout the book, that of the necessity for female figures in parenting and in society. Without a mother figure and left only with Frankenstein who subsumes both parental roles, the creatureââ¬â¢s life is blighted by his imperfection and lack of companionship. However, Caroline is also the trigger to Alfonseââ¬â¢s chivalry, thus presenting him in an improved light and allowing his character to develop at the expense of her own weakness. This is a feminist comment from Shelley, whose mother Mary Wollenstonecraft was a notorious feminist and an important influence. Justine, too, is an ââ¬Ëidealised figureââ¬â¢, described during the trial as having a countenance which, ââ¬Ëalways engaging, was rendered, by the solemnity of her feelings, exquisitely beautiful.ââ¬â¢ She is the archetypal innocent, being beautiful, weak and entirely accepting of her fate to the point of martyrdom.
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