In 1818 Mary Ashley's Frankenstein agate function Mary and Percy Shelley, Byron and his doctor went to Italy. Percy and Byron were romantic poets and Percy Shelly 's first wife gave her a daughter, but she committed suicide. Mary Shelley is 19 years old and has experienced some miscarriage, but she knows about her death as she and the other two know that she committed suicide. On a boring day, they decided to write a horror story. Mary Shelley could not think of anything to write, but she had a nightmare about bringing the dead back to life.
Frankenstein's monster is often called "Frankenstein" and is a fictitious person who first appeared in Mary Shelley's 1818 novel Frankenstein, or the modern prometheus. Shelley's title is thus a comparison between Victor Frankenstein, the creator of the monster, and the mythical character Prometheus, which uses clay to shape humans and give them power. In Shelley's Gothic story, Victor Frankenstein made living creatures in his laboratory through ambiguous methods of chemistry and alchemy. Shelly expressed the monster as 8 feet tall (2.4 m) tall, very ugly, sensitive and emotional. The monster tried to blend into human society but it was avoided, and it led him to seek revenge against Frankenstein. According to scholar Joseph Carroll, this monster occupies "the boundary normally defined between the hero and the enemies' characteristics."
At the time, 18 year old Mary Shirley wrote the story of Frankenstein. This process will take several months. In popular culture, we know that Frankenstein is a character shaking green, contrary to monsters created by Mary Shelley. This book is written about the creation of monsters by Dr. Victor Frankenstein. Shelly's book is inspired by her own personal experience. Her parents are radical intellectuals, her mother is a feminist, and she wrote a very important "advocacy of women's rights" in the feminist movement. However, shortly after childbirth, she died. Mary lost three babies and died at birth. She is familiar with death. For the author, birth is as creative and destructive as death. A monster in a book is a metaphor of a life cycle mirror