Gothic Themes & Motifs
The Creator (Victor’s Youth & Studies)
The Spark of Life (Volume 1)
The Trial & The Trek (Volume 2, Ch. 1-4)
Visual Elements (Grimly’s Art)
100

This weather element appears every time something "evil" or "pivotal" happens, such as when Victor first sees the Creature in the mountains.

Lightning or Thunderstorms.

100

Victor’s childhood home is located in this city and country

Geneva, Switzerland

100

Victor spends nearly two years in this type of room building his creation.

A "workshop of filthy creation" (or an attic/laboratory)

100

This loyal servant of the Frankenstein family is accused of William’s murder because she had his locket in her pocket.

Justine Moritz

100

Grimly uses this color palette to distinguish between the "past" and the "present".

Sepia/brown tones and blue/cool tones (Color) vs. Black and White

200

Victor often retreats to these high, snowy locations to escape his problems, a common setting in Gothic literature.

Mountains (the Alps/Glaciers).

200

This woman was "presented" to Victor as a gift and became his closest companion and future fiancé.

Elizabeth Lavenza

200

This is Victor’s immediate reaction when the Creature finally opens its "dull yellow eye."

Horror, disgust, or regret (he flees)

200

Despite her innocence, Justine is executed after she does this because she was pressured by a priest.

 Confesses to the crime

200

Instead of a lab coat, Victor is often drawn wearing this type of messy, steampunk-style clothing.

An apron (often blood-stained or dirty)

300

 In Volume 1, Victor is often shown surrounded by these—symbolizing his attempt to "play God" by assembling life from dead parts.

Bones or Skulls

300

Victor leaves his family to attend the University of Ingolstadt in this country

 Germany

300

After the Creature disappears, Victor falls into a "nervous fever" and is nursed back to health by this person

Henry Clerval

300

Seeking peace from his guilt, Victor travels to this valley in the Alps to see the glaciers.

Chamounix

300

In the illustrations, the Creature’s skin is often depicted as this, showing the individual parts Victor used.

Stitched or sutured together

400

This theme is explored through Victor’s choice to keep his experiment a secret, which ultimately leads to the death of his family members.

Isolation (or Secrecy/Alienation)

400

While his friend Henry Clerval loves literature and chivalry, Victor is obsessed with this subject

Natural Philosophy (Science)

400

Victor receives a tragic letter from his father informing him that ________ has been murdered.

William

400

Victor encounters the Creature on this specific glacier, where the Creature proves he can speak eloquently

 Mer de Glace (Sea of Ice)

400

Grimly often uses these "mechanical" looking objects in his borders and background to represent Victor’s obsession.

Gears, clocks, or scientific instruments.

500

This literary term describes a "double" or a "mirror image" of a character. Many critics argue the Creature is Victor’s ______, representing his dark side.

Doppelgänger

500

Victor is inspired by "ancient" alchemists like Cornelius Agrippa, but his professor, M. Waldman, encourages him to study this instead.

Modern Chemistry

500

Victor spots the Creature for the first time since its "birth" during a lightning storm in this specific location.

Plainpalais (outside the gates of Geneva)

500

The Creature compares himself to this biblical figure, though he says he is treated more like the "fallen angel."

Adam

500

This is the primary emotion shown on Victor’s face in almost every panel after the Creature is born.

Anxiety, fear, or exhaustion (gaunt/wide-eyed)

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