Monday, September 2, 2019
Mary Shelleys Frankenstein :: English Literature:
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein looks at the consequences of mans attempts   to meddle in the creation of life. In the 21st century, with its scientific   and technological advancements does her story still have an important   message for humankind?    Steven Foster    Mary Shelley's 'Frankenstein' looks at the consequences of mans  attempts to meddle in the creation of life. In the 21st century, with  its scientific and technological advancements does her story still  have an important message for humankind?    In Frankenstein Mary Shelley is trying to convey many messages, but  the most important one of these is that it is not man's business to do  the jobs of the gods which is why Victor Frankenstein tells his story  in the first place. I believe that it is still worth hearing this  message as we are doing the same thing again; we have the technology  to create a human being from scratch and nearly enough to choose what  it looks like. Only the other day for example on the news they were  showing how scientists could choose the sex of a baby.    Mary Shelley intended the book as a warning, the story was told within  the book as a warning and it was as if Victor Frankenstein was telling  the story to the people of the time. The reason she wrote the book in  the form of a warning was because at the time many sudden advancements  led people to believe that they would soon understand and be able to  create life. This did not happen but in our time we are realistically  close to being able to do these things so the warning is still  relevant as it talks about issues that haven't happened yet.    Most of the characters in the book are there to fulfill a purpose,  Robert Walton is in the book so that Frankenstein can warn someone  about the dangers of pursuing a dream and so he can tell the story  "learn from me, if not by my precepts, then at least by my example,  how dangerous is the acquirement of knowledge, and how much happier  that man is who believes his native village to be the world, than he  who aspires to become greater than his nature will allow". The monster  is in the book to be the result of an experiment as in the above  analogy would be the killer bees who were designed to create more  honey than ordinary bees who then escaped and have wiped out all other  types of bees, like the monster who was intended to be the first of a  new race "A new species would bless me as their creator" This quote    					    
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