What influence has the experiences in Mary Shelley's life had on the novel Frankenstein?

Authors Avatar

What influence has the experiences in Mary Shelley’s life had on the novel Frankenstein?

Mary Shelley’s experiences have had a large impact on the themes and issues in her novel Frankenstein. It is considered by some to be a birth myth, because of the influence Shelley’s experiences of motherhood has had on the novel. Further, the novel reveals numerous allusions to Shelley’s life. The novel explores the retribution visited upon Monster and creator for incomplete infant care, and several of the characters are representations of individuals in Shelley’s life. This essay explores the issues of the birth myth and family relations that are identifiable in the novel and argues that Shelley’s life and her experiences have inspired the themes of creation, birth and family in the novel Frankenstein.

Frankenstein is perceived as a birth myth because of the themes of maternity and parenthood alluded to within the novel. Mario Praz comments, “All Mrs. Shelley did was to provide a passive reflection of some of the wild fantasies which were living in the air about her.” These fantasies or issues that existed in Shelley’s life are identified in the novel as issues of birth, creation, neglect, and confusion. For example, in Frankenstein, birth is presented as a hideous thing. For birth to be possible, Victor must collect bones and decomposing body parts, among other things, in order for creation to be possible. The reason for this can be found within the life of Shelley, who in her journals describes the “horror of maternity,” since Shelley suffered from the death of her newborns on several occasions. Her journal of March 19, 1815 recorded, “Dream that my little baby came back to life again.” Also, Mary Wollstonecraft died giving birth to Mary herself. These issues contribute to Frankenstein as a birth myth, and one that was lodged in Shelley’s imagination because she herself was a mother. Shelley was set apart from the generality of writers of her own time because of her early and unpleasant experience of becoming a mother, and her unique technique of hideously intermixing death and birth in the novel. Frankenstein is a representation of Shelley’s feelings and experiences of pregnancy, and parenthood, and can be referred to as a birth myth.

The idea of the birth myth is also supported when acknowledging the role of Victor Frankenstein, the creator of the monster. Victor discovers “the cause of generation and life,” which leads him to create such a ghastly looking creature. The novel confronts the displacement of God and woman from acts of conception and birth. This is depicted through Victor Frankenstein in his laboratory, performing an unnatural act of creation. The parent is not a woman but a man who has pushed the masculine prerogative past the limits of nature, creating life not through the female body but in a laboratory. Thus, Frankenstein is a representation of both a mother and father.

Join now!

These father figures have been shaped by the experience Shelley’s had with her father, William Godwin. For example, Victor’s father is an absent father for Victor, not because he leaves home everyday, but because he actually does not. He is unconcerned with Victor’s interests. Victor himself becomes obsessed with creating his creature, forgetting his family and his friends. Also, Victor is alienated from his “abhorred Monster” by his desire to flee to the shelter of domesticity (pp. 960). This can be likened to Mary Shelley’s relationship with her own father, who she refers to as “my God.” Furthermore, the most distinctive ...

This is a preview of the whole essay