Mary Shelly authored Frankenstein. The book was first published in 1818 anonymously in England. In 1823 the book was published again in France with Shelly as the author. A common error is that Frankenstein was the name of the monster, buy it was actually name of the scientist who created the monster.
Frankenstein
because the story of frankenstein was a very insprational story which explains the stages of artificially creating life and the outcome. frankenstein is an example of a sceientist who wanted to be very popular and tried to achieve this by artificially creating life 'frankensteins monster'. the author of this book tried to show her feelings about the scientific advances of that day and i believe she was clearly not happy with the advances and tried to portray that through this book by making frankenstein seem like the bad guy by making the frankenstein created creature reak havoc and destroy the city. the character frankenstein has alot of meaning and history behind him and that is why he is such an iconic character.
No, "Frankenstein" is not an appositive. An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames or provides additional information about another noun right next to it. For example, in the phrase "Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein," "the author of Frankenstein" is an appositive that gives more information about Mary Shelley.
Women in Shelly's Frankenstein are portrayed as passive, usually being caregivers or victims.
Dead Body Parts
Mary shelly
Frankenstein
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley-- the author of Frankenstein.
Frankenstein was the main character; the man who created the monster. The other title of the book is The Modern Prometheus.
Surely NOT Frankenstein. *wajas answer* Jack the Ripper
She is the author of the novel Frankenstein.
Mary Shelley is not the name of the book but the name of the author of such books as Frankenstein and The Last Man. The rest of this answer assumes that we are talking about the novel Frankenstein. The duty in the book is shared with both Victor's and Captain Walton of the ship that takes him in at the start of the novel Also the creature has a chapter or two where he is the narrator.
He wasn't Frankenstein was a character in a book, Frankenstein's Monster by Mary Shelley.
Dr. Frankenstein Victor Frankenstein is the name of the scientist that made the monster out of dead body parts. Therefore the answer to your question is: Mr. & Mrs. Frankenstein.
In the 1942 book, "The Stranger" by Albert Camus the stranger is Meursault, a French Algerian.
Mary Shelley.
it has a gothic genre