At just 18, Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein—a novel that not only launched science fiction but also questioned patriarchy, silenced femininity, and the limits of unchecked creation
New Delhi – Every year, August 30 is marked as Frankenstein Day, honouring the birth of Mary Shelley, the teenager who, in 1818, not only launched the genre of science fiction but also delivered one of literature’s most enduring critiques of patriarchy.
At a time when women’s voices were largely excluded from intellectual life, Shelley wrote Frankenstein at just 18. Her tale of Victor Frankenstein and his Creature is remembered as gothic horror, but scholars stress that it carried radical feminist undertones.
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein tells the story of Victor Frankenstein, a young scientist who assembles and animates a sentient creature from parts of dead bodies. Horrified by his own creation, Victor abandons it, leaving the being to suffer isolation, rejection, and misery. The neglected creature eventually turns against its creator, leading to the destruction of Victor’s family and, ultimately, his own downfall. Blending gothic elements with questions of morality, the novel probes the dangers of unchecked ambition, the responsibilities of scientific discovery, and the meaning of humanity itself.
Also read: Why is Teachers’ Day (September 5) important for preserving cultural heritage?
Shelley’s narrative deliberately sidelines women: Elizabeth, Justine, and Safie are marginal or silenced, echoing how women of her era were denied agency. This absence becomes political. Scholars such as Anne Mellor have argued that Shelley used silence in her narrative to underscore what society itself refused to hear, which is women’s voices.
Even more striking is Victor’s act of creating life without women in the book. His destruction of the female creature before she is completed exposes male anxieties about female autonomy and reproductive power. In doing so, Shelley turned a tale of science into a parable about patriarchal fear.
Shelley’s life sharpened this vision. The daughter of pioneering feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, she grew up surrounded by radical thought yet struggled within a male-dominated literary culture. Multiple losses in childbirth left her acutely aware of the precariousness of women’s bodies and the lack of control they held over their own lives.
Beyond gender, Shelley also reimagined nature as an active, feminine force—a power that punishes arrogance and restores balance, challenging the Enlightenment ideal of controlling the natural world.
Also read: 6 Incredible Digital Detox Travel India Destinations for a True Off-Grid Escape
Two centuries later, Shelley’s work resonates in debates about gender, science, and ethics. From bioengineering to AI, her warning against unchecked creation without responsibility feels more urgent than ever. And her insistence—through silence, absence, and critique—that women’s roles cannot be erased makes her a pioneering feminist voice as well as the mother of science fiction.
As readers and scholars revisit Frankenstein this Frankenstein Day, Shelley is remembered not only as the woman who started a genre, but as an author who asked questions still unsettled today: Who gets to create? Whose voices are silenced? And what happens when women are written out of humanity’s most vital roles?
Prateeksha Kumari is a journalist and strategic communications professional specialising in digital journalism, political reporting, and public affairs. Her work focuses on grassroots issues, governance, and civic developments, with an emphasis on clarity, accuracy, and narrative-driven reporting.
She holds a Master’s degree in Journalism and Mass Communication from Himachal Pradesh University, Shimla and has qualified the UGC-NET examination, reflecting her academic grounding in media studies and communication research. Her reporting spans politics, public policy, health, education, and socio-economic issues, and she is experienced in bilingual (Hindi and English) content creation tailored to diverse audiences.
Alongside her journalistic work, she brings experience in political communication and public relations, where she has contributed to campaign messaging, media outreach, and narrative building. She has worked on integrated communication strategies across print and digital platforms, combining editorial judgment with audience insight and data-led content approaches.
