Monday, January 20, 2020
Society in Mary Shelleys Frankenstein and Thomas Mores Utopia :: comparison compare contrast essays
 Society in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Thomas  More's Utopia           A primary problem with the society we live in today, is the need to be  better.      The desire to have more, to be worth more, and through these inanimate  objects      to be happy is what drive us all. As children we struggled to fit in by  having      nicer clothes and more expensive shoes than the next kid. Although, in a      different from this is a sentiment echoed in Sir Thomas More's "Utopia." By       analyzing his work, I will shed some light on how this is very similar to a       theme proposed in Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein."            In Utopian society, we are shown that the way to fit in, to be cool is to be       exactly the same as those around you. Those citizens who had aspirations of       wealth and a better life, were treated the same as those who simply can not       afford to 'fit in' in our society. They were the shunned, the public  outcasts.      These people had necessarily done anything wrong, they just were unhappy with       their way of life and had glimpsed something better. This mirrors the daemon  in      Shelley's "Frankenstein." Although he was an extremely well educated person,  who      aspired for nothing more than love and happiness, they would never be his to       have. The sole reason the monster was abhorred by all that knew of him was  his      appearance. This singular feature was the reason he was beaten by Felix, and       nearly killed by the man whose daughter he had saved from river. His only  curse      was ugliness, but was this his fault?            It was easy for the daemon to curse his creator, the man who had formed him  the      way he was; in many ways I feel sympathy towards him. The sentences for being       different in Utopia might not be considered by some to be as severe, but in  many      ways they were. For many crimes in their society you could be punished to a  life      of slavery, but this is not unlike Shelley. The daemon, while not punished by  a      court system, was punished by something much worse: himself.  					    
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