
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus, is a timely novel. In this horror classic, published in 1818, Shelley describes a hubristic scientist’s abandonment of the life-form he assembles from corpses and electricity. Affectionate and innocent, the new creature is so hideous that Frankenstein himself rejects it. The lonely monster, who terrifies all humans, becomes a murderer to avenge himself.
There are two ways to approach this, first, as a traditional horror novel (it is that), second as a dark commentary on Darwinism, the Prometheus myth, and the dangers of abstractions.
The theme of loneliness overrides all abstraction, though. Frankenstein himself is, ironically, blessed with social skills and not lonely. But Captain Walton, who rescues Frankenstein from a melting iceberg (long story!), is as lonely as Frankenstein’s creature. In fact, Captain Walton has no friends on his ship.
The novel is framed by letters from Captain Walton to his sister. In an early letter he confides. “I bitterly feel the want of a friend. I have no no one near me, gentle yet courageous, possessed of a cultivated as well as of a capacious mind, whose tastes are like my own, to approve or amend my plans.”

This letter could be a personals ad, and a perfect dating match for the Creature, who is even lonelier than Walton. The creature does beg Frankenstein to make a mate for him, but Frankenstein refuses, and he has his reasons, but… Was it ethical to refuse and doom him to loneliness?
The creature is at first filled with wonder and longs to make friends, but human beings are terrified of him. He hides in a shack attached to the cottage of a poor genteel family who love music and books . By watching and listening through a crack in the wall, he learns language and the rudiments of history. He is inspired by their stories about the Greeks and Romans, and chivalry and Christianity. He wonders, “Was man, indeed, at once so powerful, so virtuous, and magnificent, yet so vicious and base?” Alas, when he reveals himself to the family, they scream and run away.
The novel is layered with references to philosophy, Shelley was influenced by Clement of Alexandria, a second-century gnostic. The following quote certainly illuminates her thoughts about the birth of Frankenstein’s Creature.
What liberates is the knowledge of what we were, what we became; where we were, whereinto we have been thrown; whereto we speed, wherefrom we are redeemed; what birth is, and what is rebirth.
Shelley, the daughter of the feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and the political philosopher William Godwin, was a radical intellectual whose storytelling is interwoven with subtle philosophical observations. Her father, William Godwin, a political philosopher, was eloquent about social-psychological theory. He emphasized the necessity of putting esponsibility before abstractions.
“..Knowledge, and the enlargement of the intellect, are poor, when unmixed with sentiments of benevolence and sympathy… and science and abstraction will soon become cold, unless they derive new attractions from ideas of society.”
This is a great read – I galloped through it – and it raises pertinent questions.


















