Friday, October 25, 2019
Shelleys Frankenstein and Austens Mansfield Park as Vehicles for Social Comment :: comparison compare contrast essays
Shelley's Frankenstein and Austen's Mansfield Park as Vehicles for Social  Comment       It has been often  noted that the Romantic writers of English literature were rebelling against the  established positions and views of society. Most of the Romantic artists were  indigenes of the well-established middle class and they were swiftly tiring of  the self-serving political depredation perpetrated by the hands of the upper  class. The Romantics were flouting convention, thumbing their noses and calling  for radical and widespread reform not only in governmental politics, but within  the politics of their own trade--creativity and art. Their myriad of works are  clear evidence of this. Contumely against established society was found mostly  in the poetical works of the day. However, much social commentary found its way  into seemingly unlikely novels. Two such novels are Mary Shelly's Frankenstein  and Jane Austen's Mansfield Park. Both of these novels are clever repositories  for social commentary and judgment.      The overwhelming social judgment by Austen and Shelly was an intolerance for  class distinction. Though they were hardly deluded enough to posses Utopian  ideals, they nevertheless felt that a society with very little class distinction  and especially without class-specific opportunity and quality of life was indeed  attainable. Given that Karl Marx formulated many of his socialist ideals as a  result of his exposure to the conditions of working class Englishmen, one might  venture to say that the Romantic artists were forerunners of the socialist  ideal, though perhaps this is a stretch. However, neither Austen nor Shelly saw  socialism as an antidote to class distinction, or if they did, it did not find  its way into their novels. They were quick to show, though, that a class  blending could occur that was acceptable to all. In fact, such a theme is  clearly prevalent in many sections of both Mansfield Park and Frankenstein.      For example, in Frankenstein, Shelly describes the acceptance of a lower  class individual into an upper class family. Justine is a lower class servant  who is taken into the Frankenstein family to alleviate the dire straits into  which she has fallen. However, the Frankenstein's do not view her as a servant  in the typical, expected sense. Rather, in a letter to the maniacal,  creature-creating  					    
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