The Misuse of Knowledge and Power in Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein (1818)
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
Knowledge and power have been studied in several literary works as a form of positive
elements that take role in characters’ improvements and as constructive items that people
should be attaining, they are typically perceived as elements that help in creating positive
impact on people’s life. Both of the concepts are projected in Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein, or
modern Prometheus. The following dissertation takes into consideration how the concepts of
knowledge and power are manipulated and misused in the novel. This research examines how
knowledge and power are related to each other by studying this relation through several
characters. The main character, a scientist, represents how attaining powerful social status
leads to the possibility of easier access to knowledge and how knowledge can be a mean on
gaining power; furthermore, how knowledge is misused by defying natures rules. Similarly to
knowledge, power and its projection is also explored by analysing the characters’ decisions,
more precisely abusing power in a way that it is endangering to their life and the life of those
among them
