Mary Sherry's Frankenstein is full of various potential themes. That key is the impact of society on biological personality. These themes have been debated and discussed many times, and the novel has been compared many times with contemporaries of the Romantic era. But if you want to combine Shirley's masterpiece with other masterpieces, the most amazing piece is the story of Genesis. Victor and creature are obvious representatives of God and Adam, and the two events are parallel and differ in some respects.
Compare Mary Sherry 's Frankenstein and Kenneth Brana' s Frankenstein with most Americans who think about Frankenstein because of Frankenstein 's many movies. Contrary to common beliefs, Mary Sherry's Frankenstein is a scientist, not a monster. This "monster" is not like an implicit, angry criminal as described in the 1994 movie novel. Sherry's original Frankenstein was distorted by this Kenneth Blanca movie. Frankenstein's human morality is a product of evolution by genetic mutation and natural selection. It is entirely part of nature, but it is not - it is the opposite. In the last sentence of "Origin of Species", Darwin said, "This view of life has greatness ... In this form the most beautiful and most wonderful infinite form already exists and evolves. "A beautiful and wonderful form includes agents that react truly ethically to real moral facts and shape natural things."
Discussions between nature and cultivation are at the forefront of Mary Sherry novel Frankenstein. Victor Frankenstein and the two protagonists he created have innate individuality to determine the personality and lifestyle of each individual, but Frankenstein and this is affected by two different cultivation methods I will. The nature and cultivation of the whole novel are important, but the natural argument is the reason for the collapse of Victor Frankenstein, and the discussion on child rearing is the cause of this biological collapse. In explaining Victor and the character of this creature, Shelley has the reader understand the idea through her powerful language. Shelly also uses light and fire as a symbol of intellectual profit and physical destructive power. This symbol is the key to supporting the essence and cultivation of the whole novel.