Summary 'Frankenstein' by Mary Shelley - Quotation log with chapter summaries, AO3,AO4,AO5 included
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Comparative and contextual study
Institution
OCR
Book
Frankenstein
Complete quotation log for Mary Shelley (1818) 'Frankenstein'. Includes character list, chapter by chapter summary, key quotes organised by character with where in the book, analysis, AO3 and AO5 (context and a range of critical quotes drawn from a range of critical essays and different performance...
Summarised critical viewpoints from a range of sources including direct quotations which makes this perfect for use in an essay
Quotation logs
Frankenstein- character list and chapter summaries
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OCR
English Literature
Comparative and contextual study
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‘Frankenstein’ by Mary Shelley
Characters The creature references:
‘The wretch’
● Victor Frankenstein ‘Miserable monster’
● Elizabeth Lavenza ‘Demoniacal corpse’
● Caroline Beaufort ‘My enemy’
‘Abhorred monster!’
● Alphonse Frankenstein ‘Fiend thou art’
● William Frankenstein ‘Abhorred devil’
● Ernst Frankenstein ‘Detested form’
● Robert Walton ‘Wretched devil’
● Justine ‘’Monster! Ugly Wretch’
‘You are an ogre’
● The creature
● Henry Clerval
● De Lacy
● Felix De Lacy
● Agatha De Lacy
● Safie
Chapter Summaries
Volume One
● Letter one: We are introduced to Robert Walton, an Englishman on an dangerous
expedition to the North Pole. He is writing to his sister Margaret Saville. He talks
about the preparations leading up to his departure and his ambition for seafaring and
desire for glory.
● Letter two: Five months later, another letter is sent to Walton’s sister Margaret. In
this letter he expresses his feelings of isolation and desire for a friend and how he
feels too uneducated to find someone to share his dreams with as he is ‘self-
educated’. This letter is quite morbid and hopeless but also references the Rime of
the Ancient Mariner ‘But I shall kill no albatross’
● Letter three: Four months later, Walton sends out a third but very brief letter. He tells
hi sister that his ship has set sail and how he feels confident yet aware of the
dangers that await him.
● Letter four: Just one month later, Walton sends his fourth and final letter to his
sister. This letter has a shift of form as there are the use of diary entries within this
letter. The ship has been trapped in ice and it is all foggy. The crew members spot a
large distant figure. The next morning they encounter a sledge where only one dog is
still alive and a weak and frail man who looks tired and refuses to board the ship until
Walton tells him that he’s heading north. As time passes, the stranger and Walton
become friends and exchange stories, where the narrative will begin the next day,
ending Walton’s frame narrative and commencing that of Victor Frankenstein’s.
● Chapter one: The stranger, Victor Frankenstein, begins his narration. He tells us of
how he came from a well respected family from Geneva and how his mother
Caroline, who’s father (also Alphonse’s friend) passed away leaving Caroline in
poverty. Two years later she and Alphonse got married and later had children. He
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