that seems to be all i've picked up from english in the past term. my teacher has this droning sort of voice, and every ten minutes he yells. i seem to hear a lot of 'nature' in the droning. i'm also thinking of it in comparison to bladerunner and it's pretty much nature vs artificiality, with a lot more meaning to it than just that but eh.Not so much nature as nature vs creation.
look through volume 2; chapter 1/2Can I have many specific examples?
What I got from it (and it was 5 years ago when I studied it) is humanity in the artificial (the creature), and inhumanity in the natural (Frankenstein).that seems to be all i've picked up from english in the past term. my teacher has this droning sort of voice, and every ten minutes he yells. i seem to hear a lot of 'nature' in the droning. i'm also thinking of it in comparison to bladerunner and it's pretty much nature vs artificiality, with a lot more meaning to it than just that but eh.
shelley focuses on the world around the characters, describing in minute detail the surroundings, and how it affects them, especially frankenstein and his monster.
nah, nature is actually mentioned a lot in this text in comparison to blade runnerWhat I got from it (and it was 5 years ago when I studied it) is humanity in the artificial (the creature), and inhumanity in the natural (Frankenstein).
I never studied it in relation to Blade Runner. It was just a Romantic text for me. *shrug*nah, nature is actually mentioned a lot in this text in comparison to blade runner
which is correct, but when you compare it to bladerunner [have you seen it?] the whole society is artificial [inc animals] vs. the nature in frankenstein. even though the monster shouldn't exist, it was made of natural body parts, whereas the replicants [the parallels to the monster in bladerunner.] are completely artificial. we're supposed to look at how two texts with many similarities [plot, morals, etc] have changed through time due to their contexts, so nature fits in with the context of the 19th century england, as much technology hadn't been invented, compared to the 20th [or 21st when it was set] century when everything is technologically based.What I got from it (and it was 5 years ago when I studied it) is humanity in the artificial (the creature), and inhumanity in the natural (Frankenstein).
lightning?So the lightning is part of nature, this gave birth to the monster,
even Walton deciding eager to discover new land is an example of romantic thinking?
wtf are you on?the monster is like rah rah rah
then the girl is like no stop it
then he is like rah rah
im talking about the Frankenstein derrwtf are you on?