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Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: A Review

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Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: A Review
Frankenstein explores one of mankind's most persistent and destructive flaws: prejudice.
Nearly every human character in the novel assumes that the monster must be dangerous based on its outward appearance, when in truth the monster is (originally) warm and open­hearted. Again and again the monster finds himself assaulted and rejected by entire villages and families despite his attempts to convey his benevolent intentions. The violence and prejudice he encounters convinces him of the "barbarity of man." That the only character who accepts the monster is a blind man, De Lacey, suggests that the monster is right: mankind is barbaric, and blinded by its own prejudice.

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