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Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Uploaded by CaseyP on Jul 26, 2017

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Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is a tale that is set at the time of the industrial revolution in Europe in the 1800’s. From the novel, education came to bear the load of concerns regarding the control of the individuals who had not gone through the tradition of formal education. Such people were susceptible to social instability. Even conservatives such as Hannah More who were antagonists of radical reform acknowledged the influential power of education especially reading as a powerful element of social control. The novel focuses on the human nature as well as the likelihood controlling experience to shape character and cultural values. Additionally, it stresses on the challenging influences from experience on the vulnerable and unstable individuals who face cultural issues concerning reading and education.
Mary Shelley describes Caroline as an example of true femininity who was liberated from class degradation. As a result, Caroline searched for other girls who were in the same situation to rescue them from lower class powers. Caroline achieved her objectives through educating the young girls on the qualities of a precisely conventional domesticity. She meet Elizabeth who had an innate and upper-class feminine quality that made her the outstanding one in the family of “dark-eyed, barely little vagabonds.” (Shelley 28). Under the appropriate middle-class influence, Elizabeth proved to be a perfect domestic woman, a sister, a friend, a daughter, and a wife-to-be.
Additionally, Justine was rescued and cultured by Victor’s mother. Besides, Justine imitated the “manners and the phraseology” of victors mother (Shelley 69). As a low-class member and a servant, Justine’s social position revealed cultural anxieties regarding the vulnerability of women and the stabilizing duty of middle-class domestic education. Justine is a representation of a female advancement, something that became evident when Elizabeth described Caroline’s approval of Justine by praising the flexible class boundaries in Geneva. As she put it “there is a small difference between the various classes of its dwellers, and the lower class being neither so despised nor so poor, they have more refined manners and morals” (Shelley 69). Such claims concerning flexibility became evident from the fact that Justine who was regarded as a lower class woman and whose learning failed to take, was accused of dying for William’s killer. Therefore, it shows that educated women are fulfilled and fulfill their social duties and thus pose a minimum danger of tampering with culture as well as its values....

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Uploaded by:   CaseyP

Date:   07/26/2017

Category:   Personal

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Views:   204

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