Saturday, January 4, 2020

Where Do the Motives in Characters from “Frankenstein” and...

Where do the motives in characters from â€Å"Frankenstein† and â€Å"One flew over the cuckoos nest† originate and and what role do these motives play in defining the fate of a character? Motivation is a key driving force in most human beings and lies hidden to be discovered behind every action. Authors makes characters interesting to the reader by inviting us to discover these motives, and to trace the events that led to the motivation that inevitably led to the rise or fall of a character. In both novels we are introduced to the concept that similar motives can lead to strikingly different outcomes. This is seen by contrasting the fates and actions of Frankenstein and Clerval, both fueled by the thirst for knowledge, and Mc.Murphy†¦show more content†¦This experience did not necessarily create the motivation to battle authority, which was more likely to have become reinforced through the racism of the white man towards the Chiefs tribe and the demasculation of his father by his mother, however his experience of people not listening to him defined the way he would later battle the combine. This illustrates that childhood not only plays a part in the type of motives characters possess, but also how they carry them to their end. The theme of the importance of childhood in the shape of motivations and future character plans is also evident in both the character of Victor Frankenstein and the Creature. Victor Frankenstein can trace his interest in knowledge back to finding â€Å"works of Cornelius Agrippa† at a house he is staying at, however the fact that he pursues it with such as passion is rather due to his father telling him to â€Å" not waste your time on this trash† than the accidental act of finding the books themselves. The utterance of these words instills in Victor a motivation to rebel against his fathers wishes, and embrace the philosophers that his father does not approve of. This is seen where he says â€Å" If, instead of this remark my father had taken pains to explain...I would have thrown Agrippa aside,†

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