• the amiableness of domestic affection

    Although no reader of Frankenstein, if asked to list its chief concerns, would be
    likely to narrow the range to the value of domesticity and virtue, we can discern
    in this emphasis a veiled attempt to steer potential critics away from an attack on
    the novel's political or religious implications. At the same time, the domestic affections
    are certainly of import for the novel, yet like many other themes encountered in its
    progressive development, their value becomes increasingly ambiguous.