Frankenstein Chapters 5-10 Flashcards

Prose Revision

1
Q

‘It was on a _________ night of November’ (page 45)

A

dreary

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2
Q

‘the rain pattered _________ against the pains’ (page 45)

A

dismally

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3
Q

Why does Shelley have Victor animate the monster at night?

A

To convey the transgressive nature of his act - it is something taboo that must be hidden from society.

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4
Q

‘I saw the dull _______ eye of the creature open’ (page 45)

A

yellow

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5
Q

‘his ______ skin scarcely covered the work of muscles and arteries beneath’ (page 45)

A

yellow

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6
Q

When the monster is first animated, what colour is he repeatedly linked to?

A

yellow

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7
Q

Why does Shelley repeatedly describe the monster as yellow - ‘his yellow skin’/’the dull yellow eye’ (page 45)

A

Yellow is often linked to sickliness and contamination, suggesting the corrupt nature of Victor’s actions.

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8
Q

What word (beginning with c) does Victor use to describe the monster when he is animated?

A

catastrophe (page 45)

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9
Q

‘the lifeless __________ that lay at my feet’ (page 45)

A

thing

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10
Q

Before Victor animates the monster, he refers to it as ‘the lifeless thing’ - how is this significant?

A

It shows how, even before the monster is born, Victor dismisses it and refuses to acknowledge the human life he has created, calling it a ‘thing’.

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11
Q

Which word (beginning with t) means an act that is generally seen as socially unacceptable?

A

taboo

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12
Q

Who is described as ‘exquisitely beautiful’ (page 64)

A

Justine - during her trial.

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13
Q

‘She is very clever and gentle, and extremely ________’ (page 52)

A

pretty

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14
Q

Who is described as ‘very clever and gentle, and extremely pretty’, (page 52) and by whom?

A

Justine is described this way by Henry Clerval

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15
Q

‘I am resigned to the _________ awaiting me’ (page 68)

A

fate

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16
Q

‘I _________ permission to have a few witnesses’ (page 65)

A

beg

17
Q

Which word (beginning with p) might be used to describe the character of Justine?

A

passive

18
Q

How is Shelley’s choice of name - Justine - significant?

A

It is a word that closely resembles ‘justice’ - this is important as Shelley uses the minor character to highlight the injustices faced by the poor and by females during the early 19th century.

19
Q

Who is Justine falsely accused of murdering?

A

William (Victor’s younger brother)

20
Q

Which political event of the late 18th century might have shaped Shelley’s presentation of Justine?

A

The French Revolution

21
Q

How might the presentation of Justine have been influenced by the events of The French Revolution?

A

The French Revolution was a revolt against the mistreatment of the working classes. The Romantics supported this movement, and Shelley uses Justine to represent the exploitation of this group and the need for change.

22
Q

Which character speaks up on behalf of Justine at her trial?

A

Elizabeth (not Victor). This shows the divide between men and women during this period and the discrimination faced by many females.

23
Q

When Victor is reunited with the monster, what are some of the words /phrases that show how the title character sees his creation as inhuman?

A

‘vile insect’ (page 77), ‘abhorred monster’ (page 77), ‘unearthly ugliness’ (page 77)

24
Q

What does Victor call the monster - ‘vile ____________’

A

insect

25
Q

When Victor is reunited with the monster, what are some of the words /phrases that show how the title character sees his creation as blasphemous and unholy?

A

‘the daemon’ (page 77), ‘wretched devil’ (page 77), ‘the wretch’ (page 77)

26
Q

‘I ought to be thy ___________, but I am rather the fallen angel’ (page 77)

A

Adam

27
Q

‘I ought to be thy Adam, but I am rather the __________ angel’ (page 77)

A

fallen

28
Q

When he is reunited with Victor, what word does the monster pleadingly repeat to his creator?

A

Listen - e.g. ‘Listen to my tale/’listen to me’/’listen to me and grant me thy compassion’ (page 78)

29
Q

When he is reunited with the monster, what command does Victor repeatedly give his creation?

A

Begone. E.g. ‘Begone vile insect’ (page 77), ‘Begone, I will not hear you’ (page 78) ‘Begone, relieve me from the sight of your detested form’ (page 78)

30
Q

What text does the monster allude to when he says: ‘I ought to be thy Adam, but I am rather the fallen angel’ (page 77)?

A

Paradise Lost - an epic poem by John Milton that the monster reads whilst observing the DeLaceys.

31
Q

How do the villagers, who are the first humans the monster encounters, respond to him?

A

The shepherd ‘shrieked loudly’ and ran away, ‘one of the women fainted’ and ‘some attacked [him]…with many kinds of missile weapons’ (page 82)

32
Q

What does tabula rasa mean?

A

blank slate

33
Q

Who created the idea of tabula rasa?

A

The philosopher, John Locke.

34
Q

What is the theory of tabula rasa?

A

That all human beings are born as a ‘blank slate’ - we are al a product of the way we are treated by our environment and society as a whole.

35
Q

Which character might most obviously be seen as embodying the theory of tabula rasa?

A

The monster. He says to Victor ‘I was benevolent and good, misery made me a fiend’ (page 78). We see some evidence of this in the way he is attacked by the villagers, the Delaceys and even by the person he saves from drowning.