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  1. Elizabeth is Frankenstein’s adopted sister and his wife. She is also a mother-figure: when Frankenstein’s real mother is dying, she says that Elizabeth “must supply my place.”. Elizabeth fills many roles in Frankenstein’s life, so when the Monster kills her, Frankenstein is deprived of almost every form of female companionship at once.

    • Robert Walton

      Walton’s letters to his sister form a frame around the main...

    • Frankenstein

      Frankenstein describes Elizabeth’s death. We rarely hear...

    • Henry Clerval

      Also like Frankenstein, Clerval makes a discovery at...

  2. Role in Young Frankenstein. In Mel Brooks' 1974 film Young Frankenstein, Elizabeth (Madeline Kahn) is a tightly wound socialite who is engaged to Dr. Frederick Frankenstein (Gene Wilder). When Frederick inherits his great-grandfather's estate in Transylvania, Elizabeth sees him off at the train station. Although Frederick tries to be ...

    • Mary Shelley
    • German and Italian
  3. Summary: Chapter 21. After confronting Victor, the townspeople take him to Mr. Kirwin, the town magistrate. Victor hears witnesses testify against him, claiming that they found the body of a man along the beach the previous night and that, just before finding the body, they saw a boat in the water that resembled Victor’s. Mr. Kirwin decides ...

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  5. Elizabeth is a stunningly beautiful and remarkably pure girl whom Victor's mother adopts. All the Frankensteins adore Elizabeth, and Victor quickly begins to "protect, love, and cherish" her. Eventually Victor and Elizabeth marry. Through all of it, Elizabeth remains gorgeous, pure, and passive. NOTE: In the first edition (1818) of Frankenstein ...

  6. Quick answer: In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein's relationship with Elizabeth reveals his self-centered and possessive nature.Victor views Elizabeth as a possession rather than ...

  7. Dec 19, 2018 · Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is a Gothic horror novel about a man named Victor Frankenstein who discovers the secret to creating life. He uses this knowledge to form a hideous monster, which becomes the source of his misery and demise. The novel is presented as an epistolary nested narrative, following the first-person accounts of Captain ...