This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) that shows how Shelley criticizes society through presenting feminist viewpoints. I argue that Shelley critiques traditional gender roles by punishing characters subscribing to them. Most of the characters conform to traditional gender stereotypes. The male characters are ambitious and self-centered while the female characters are self-sacrificing and docile. The main protagonist Victor Frankenstein represents patriarchal belief and is incapable of any feminine attributes which leads to the demise of everyone he cares for, and himself. The male-only narration emphasizes how insignificant the male characters deem women to be, as they are rarely...
This essay argues that Virginia Woolf’s Orlando (1928) suggests that self-perception is not tied to ...
Feminist readings of Mary Shelley have shown how her work critiques the values of ‘masculine’ Romant...
The essay explores 'Frankenstein'’s representation of selfhood as an effect of specular figuration, ...
This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) t...
This thesis examines social criticism in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. The novel subtly challenges th...
Mary Shelley lived her life surrounded by men and made man the main focus of her famous horror story...
Frankenstein, Or: The Modern Prometheus was the outcome of a challenge among friends to write a ghos...
This essay studies the monster of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein from a feminist point of view and shed...
This B.A. Essay examines feminism in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) in relation to such literary...
Feminist analyses of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein have yielded fruitful interpretations that make sen...
This paper explores how Mary Shelley used the unprecedented motif of male procreation to both acurra...
ABSTRACTKumalasari, Isti. 2012. The Female Voices in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: TheModern Promethe...
Feminist literary critics have long focused on the female gender role in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein...
<h3 data-fontsize="17" data-lineheight="23">Abstract</h3> <p>Because of its enduri...
Cave ab homine unius libri, as the Latin epigram warns us: beware the author of one book. Frankens...
This essay argues that Virginia Woolf’s Orlando (1928) suggests that self-perception is not tied to ...
Feminist readings of Mary Shelley have shown how her work critiques the values of ‘masculine’ Romant...
The essay explores 'Frankenstein'’s representation of selfhood as an effect of specular figuration, ...
This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) t...
This thesis examines social criticism in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. The novel subtly challenges th...
Mary Shelley lived her life surrounded by men and made man the main focus of her famous horror story...
Frankenstein, Or: The Modern Prometheus was the outcome of a challenge among friends to write a ghos...
This essay studies the monster of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein from a feminist point of view and shed...
This B.A. Essay examines feminism in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) in relation to such literary...
Feminist analyses of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein have yielded fruitful interpretations that make sen...
This paper explores how Mary Shelley used the unprecedented motif of male procreation to both acurra...
ABSTRACTKumalasari, Isti. 2012. The Female Voices in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: TheModern Promethe...
Feminist literary critics have long focused on the female gender role in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein...
<h3 data-fontsize="17" data-lineheight="23">Abstract</h3> <p>Because of its enduri...
Cave ab homine unius libri, as the Latin epigram warns us: beware the author of one book. Frankens...
This essay argues that Virginia Woolf’s Orlando (1928) suggests that self-perception is not tied to ...
Feminist readings of Mary Shelley have shown how her work critiques the values of ‘masculine’ Romant...
The essay explores 'Frankenstein'’s representation of selfhood as an effect of specular figuration, ...