Tulizar wrote:Interesting. I didn't realize there was a revised Frankentstein. I'm not sure which edition I read, but, after reading Murrin's post, am inclined to believe it was the first edition.
I definitely recall Victor almost washing his hands of his creation. I thought he came across as uncaring and almost arrogant.
He came off as quite a jerk at times in the second edition as well.
It wasn't because he "played God" - it was because he created life and then just let go of it - with no guidance or input or help at all to his hapless creation.
Not to mention the way he aborted his second creation, breaking his promise to the monster.
While the monster does become a monster...it is not clear to me that he would have been so violent and dangerous if he had freely been given love and acceptance in his "childhood". Perhaps he would have still been a monster, but I am not certain that it would have been a foregone conclusion.
Sort of the issue with any juvenile criminal - does s/he bwcome a rotter because s/he was born that way - or is it because s/he had rotten parenting?
In this case, Frankenstein was overcome with serious depression after the "birth" of the monster, and was having serious health and emotional issues of his own.
But was that really a valid excuse in the face of the huge needs of his offspring?
Could Frankenstein, given his own problems, been capable of helping the monster? Would the monster have been a monster of he had been able to love it? Where doe the responsibility of a parent end when faced with huge problems of his own?
Lots of great parent/child issues here, lots of deep dysfunctional parenting/family things to think about.