Creatures Features
It's Alive... and Then What?
Nature Calls
The Modern Pro-theme-us
Paradise Lost & Found
100

This character creates the creature and later regrets what he has done.

Victor Frankenstein

100

The novel begins and ends with this character’s letters to his sister.

Robert Walton

100

Storms, lightning, mountains, and glaciers are all examples of this major motif in the novel.

Nature

100

Victor’s story warns about the danger of pursuing knowledge without this.

Responsibility


100

The subtitle of the novel is The Modern this mythological figure.

Prometheus

200

This character is accused of murdering William Frankenstein, even though she is innocent.

Justine Moritz

200

Shelley’s use of letters and stories within stories creates this type of structure.

Frame narrative / Nested Narrative

200

Light often symbolizes this, especially in connection with Victor’s scientific goals.

knowledge or discovery

200

The creature’s suffering shows the importance of this basic human need.

companionship, acceptance, love

200

The creature reads this famous biblical epic and compares himself to Adam and Satan.

Paradise Lost

300

Victor’s decision not to reveal the truth about William’s murder shows this flaw in his character.

cowardice, selfishness, or refusal to take responsibility

300

Walton’s ambition mirrors Victor’s, making Walton this type of character.

a foil

300

The Arctic setting at the beginning and end of the novel emphasizes this theme.

isolation

300

The creature’s transformation from gentle to violent develops this theme.

nature vs. nurture

300

The Prometheus allusion connects Victor to a figure who is punished for giving this to humanity.

fire / knowledge

400

Victor’s misreading of the creature’s wedding-night threat shows that Victor often thinks in this way

self-centeredly / egotistically

400

Because Walton, Victor, and the creature all tell parts of the story, readers must question this.

reliability / perspective / subjective truth

400

The sublime landscapes often make Victor’s problems seem small compared to this.

power/ vastness of nature

400

Shelley criticizes society by showing that people judge the creature mainly because of this.

his appearance

400

The creature’s comparison to Adam emphasizes his desire for this from his creator.

care, guidance, companionship, belonging

500

By the end of the novel, Victor and the creature have become similar because both are consumed by this. 

revenge, isolation, and obsession

500

Walton’s decision to turn back at the end matters because it shows that Victor’s story has served this purpose.

warning / cautionary tale about ambition

500

Shelley complicates the symbol of light by showing that the pursuit of knowledge can also lead to this.

danger, destruction, or suffering?

500

The novel suggests that isolation does not only cause sadness; it can also damage this.

morality, identity, or judgment

500

The creature’s comparison to Satan emphasizes how rejection transforms him into this.

outcast, rebel, or figure of revenge

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