Frankenstein | Style
Narration
Instead of beginning with Victor's point of view, Shelley introduces us to Walton first. Using a frame device, in which the tale is told to us by someone who reads it or hears it from someone else, Shelley invites readers to believe Victor's story through an objective person. Shelley also uses an important literary device known as the epistolary form—where letters tell the story—using letters between Walton and his sister to frame both Victor's and the creature's narrative. Before the novel's first chapter, Walton writes to his sister about the...
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- Frankenstein: Introduction
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- Frankenstein: Mary Shelley Biography
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Frankenstein: Summary and Analysis
- Volume 1: Letters 1-4 Summary and Analysis
- Volume 1: Chapters 1 and 2 Summary and Analysis
- Volume 1: Chapters 3, 4, and 5 Summary and Analysis
- Volume 1: Chapters 6 and 7 Summary and Analysis
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- Volume 3: Chapter 7 Summary and Analysis
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Frankenstein: Quizzes
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