Sunday, August 18, 2019
Comparing Reactions to Industrialism in Frankenstein and The Communist
Reactions to Industrialism in Frankenstein and The Communist Manifesto     Ã     Ã  Ã   The radical  changes of the nineteenth century were unlike any the world had seen before. A  sense of these changes were felt by all in many aspects; not just politically,  but in social and cultural means as well. When Mary Shelley's Frankenstein was  published in 1831, it was clear that many general elements of the romantic era  were well reflected. Similarly, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels' The Communist  Manifesto appeared in 1848, a time of great national political revolutions  throughout Europe. While textually these historic nineteenth century texts have  little in common, it is clear however that they both are strong reactions to  previous movements of European society. Underlying Shelley's Frankenstein are  strong uses of romanticism, whereas The Communist Manifesto is undoubtedly  opposing the consequences of the industrial revolution in Europe; both reactions  of the past, yet effective in starkly different ways.      Ã       Frankenstein, like other English Romantics, placed great emphasis on the  power of nature. The Arve Ravine, and the Valley of Chamounix exemplify the  harmony and beautiful serenity of nature, and add to the romantic quality of the  novel while sharply contrasting with the chaos of Victor's troubled mind. The  Romantic movement can be seen as a protest against the rapid industrialization  that was occurring in England at the time of Frankenstein's publication. While  many interpretations are plausible, the novel depicts the fear that technology  (and the human obsession with technology) would ultimately prove disastrous. The  characters of Walton and Frankenstein are shaped by Romantic idealism, as  manifested in their ...              ...r a classless, productive, industrial society that was  beneficial to all, the mere recognition of strength in numbers and class  solidarity were fundamentally effective and paved the way not only for future  governments but for future laborers.      Ã       Ã       Works Cited      Ã       Lowe-Evans, Mary.Ã   Frankenstein: Mary Shelly's Wedding Guest. New  York:Ã   Twayne Publishers, 1993.     Ã       Marx, Karl. Communist Manifesto. Birth of the Communist Manifesto. Ed. Dirk  J.     Ã  Ã   Struik. New York: International, 1971. 85-125.     Ã       Oates, Joyce Carol.Ã   "Frankenstein: Creation as Catastrophe." Mary  Shelly's Frankenstein.Ã   Ed. Harold Bloom.Ã   New York: Chelsea House  Publishers, 1987.     Ã       Shelly, Mary.Ã   Frankenstein: Or the Modern Prometheus.Ã   New York:  Penguin Books, 1978.     Ã       Tropp, Martin.Ã   Mary Shelly's Monster.Ã   Boston:Ã   Houghton  Mifflin, 1976.     Ã                        
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