Frankenstein Nature Vs Nurture Essay

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Pages: 3

Throughout many years, people have wondered what the difference and impact dealing with nature and nurture have been on Victor Frankenstein and the creature he constructed. Nature and nurture play a very important role in Frankenstein the novel, but both of them are very different elements and they both have a huge impact on both characters. Mary Shelley makes it very clear that Victor Frankenstein was fully responsible for the upbringing of the creature and the creature’s psychological development. The universal aspects of the novel make the reader see that there is a relationship between society and the individual, the creature, throughout the novel and that one horrible event can lead to another. The creatures role in the human society was …show more content…
Shelley uses Frankenstein's judgement and interpretation of the creature to make the readers see the monster though Victor's eyes and have them judge the creature based on how he is seeing things. Because Frankenstein never seemed to care about his relationship with the creature or want anything to do with him, it took a toll on his life and messed with the creatures nurture within the world. The author writes, “All men hate the wretched; how, then, must I be hated, whm am miserable beyond all living things! Yet you, my creator detest and spurn me, thy creature, to whom thou art bound by ties only dissoluble by the annihilation of one of us” (Shelley 81). When the creature first came to life, Frankenstein did not want to raise him properly or be responsible for him and basically just threw him out into the world to fend for himself.The creature finally learns that his creator abandoned him because of the way he turned out and his appearance. The society that the creature was faced with not prime. First, his own creator decided that he was not going to love or care about him, so that gave him a bad impression of humans. Then, whenever he would go out and see others, he would be beaten and struck down because of his appearance which caused damage in the creature's knowledge of the world.
Throughout Frankenstein, nature and nurture are seen as completely