The
answer to this question is key to what Shelley is saying to us aboutin .
Often thought of as a monster, it is in fact the creature's humanity that causes him to react to
his "father's" rejection in much the same way that any of us would react to a similar
rejection from our parents. The creature doesn't understand why Frankenstein would have created
him, only to cast him out and consign him to an existence wherein he is aware of his own
hideousness but also aware of the warmth of a fire and the beauty of a moon. It is an existence
in which he feels human inside but...
Saturday, 18 February 2017
How might Frankenstein's rejection of his creature impact the creature in Frankenstein?
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