It is very clear in Frankenstein
that Victor Frankenstein has an obsession with life. The Frankenstein
family was very close and had good familial values. Victor had a pretty good
life growing up and loved his family dearly. I think that a major part of the
book that set the stage for Victor’s obsession with creating life was when his
mother died of scarlet fever. This experience was very hard for Victor and his
departure from home shortly after didn’t help.
The death of Victor’s mother is brought up later in the novel
when his cousin Elizabeth writes to him when he is ill. On page 40, “Surely,
Victor, you must have been exceedingly ill; and this makes us all very
wretched, as much so nearly as after the death of your dear mother.” The loss
of Victor’s mother, Elizabeth’s aunt, is obviously still on the hearts and minds
of the family. There is another illness mentioned in Elizabeth’s letter on page
42, “When my dearest aunt died, every one was too much occupied in their own
grief to notice poor Justine…” There is so much emphasis on poor health and
dying in this novel and I think it is part of what drove Victor to want to
create life.
What other factors fed Frankenstein’s obsession?
Why would someone that grew up with such a close family
choose solitude later in life?
I agree that there is definitely an emphasis on death and illness in Frankenstein. I think that is purposely done to contrast Frankenstein's creation of life. Maybe Frankenstein is so ashamed of his creation that he chooses solitude as a sort of self-induced punishment upon himself.
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