These Frankenstein essay prompts are designed for grades 9–12 ELA. They cover Shelley’s themes, characterization, author’s craft, historical context, and personal response. The prompts are organized by when they work best in the unit: before reading, during reading, and after reading.
Before Reading: Essay Prompts on Science, Ambition, and Morality
The pre-reading lessons for Frankenstein generate rich response material. Before students meet Dr. Victor Frankenstein, they can grapple with the same conflicts that drive the novel. The following prompts work well as pre-reading essays, quick-writes, or anticipation pieces.
Science, Knowledge, and Consequences
Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at a moment when science seemed capable of anything — including, some believed, generating life itself. The novel asks whether the pursuit of knowledge has limits, and whether the scientist bears responsibility for what that knowledge produces.
- What is the purpose of science? Should scientific inquiry have ethical limits, or should scientists be free to pursue any discovery? Write an essay defending your position.
- Write an essay responding to this question: Who is responsible when a new technology causes harm? The scientist who created it? The society that funded it? The end user? Take a clear position and defend it.
- Does the popularity of science and technological progress have an overall positive effect on society, or does rapid advancement continually create new dangers? Write an essay arguing a position on this question.
Ambition and Its Costs
The Frankenstein anticipation guide asks students to take positions on ambition, personal greatness, and the price of pursuing extraordinary goals. These make strong personal essay springboards.
- What are the costs of ambition? Is it possible to pursue greatness without sacrificing something essential, such as relationships, ethics, or peace of mind? Write a personal essay exploring your own view on ambition.
- Is it possible to have both extraordinary ambition and a well-rounded, connected life? Or does great ambition always come at a cost to the people around you? Write an essay exploring this tension.
- Some people believe that personal greatness requires isolation and sacrifice. Others argue that meaningful achievement is only possible in connection with others. Which view do you find more convincing? Write an essay defending your position.
Nature vs. Nurture: Are Monsters Made or Born?
These prompts draw on the pre-reading discussion of human development and invite students to form a position before they see how Shelley answers it.
- What factors determine who a person becomes? Write an essay arguing for the relative importance of nature (genetics, innate tendencies) versus nurture (environment, upbringing, experience) in shaping human character.
- Write an essay responding to this question: Are people born with a capacity for evil, or is evil always the product of circumstances? Take a clear position and support it.
- Some philosophers, like John Locke, argued that humans are born as blank slates shaped entirely by experience. Others, like Jean Jacques Rousseau, believed that humans are innately good but corrupted by society. Which view do you find more persuasive? Write an essay comparing these positions and defending your own.
Morality and Ethical Responsibility
Frankenstein is, at its core, a novel about what we owe to each other and what happens when those obligations go unmet. Before reading, students can examine their own moral frameworks and consider where responsibility begins and ends.
- What does it mean to act morally? Is morality a set of rules that apply to everyone equally, or is it something that depends on circumstances? Write an essay defending your view of what morality is and where it comes from.
- Write an essay responding to this statement: “A person is responsible not only for what they do, but for what they fail to do.” Do you agree? Use examples from history, current events, or your own experience to support your argument.
- Is it ever morally acceptable to keep a dangerous secret in order to protect yourself or others? Where is the line between self-preservation and ethical cowardice? Write an essay defending your position.
- Some moral philosophers argue that the rightness of an action depends entirely on its consequences. Others argue that certain actions are wrong regardless of outcome. Which view is closer to the truth? Write an essay exploring these two approaches to ethics and defending your own position.
Recommended resources:
- Frankenstein Unit and Teacher Guide — PURCHASE
- Frankenstein Lesson Plans — PURCHASE
- Frankenstein Assignments and Extension Tasks — PURCHASE
While Reading: Essay Prompts on Character, Craft, and Conflict
These prompts work best when students are actively engaging with the novel. They draw on specific characters, plot events, and craft elements that reward close reading. Many work well as timed writes, in-class essays, or short analytical responses.
Characterization and Point of View
- Victor Frankenstein presents himself as a virtuous, loving person who is a victim of fate and circumstance. Write an essay analyzing whether this self-portrait holds up under scrutiny. Is Victor a reliable narrator of his own story? Use specific textual evidence to support your analysis.
- Frankenstein’s creature is one of the most surprising characters in English literature. Write an essay analyzing his character — his values, his intelligence, his emotional life, and his capacity for both kindness and violence. How does Shelley use him to challenge the reader’s assumptions about appearance?
- Victor Frankenstein and his creature are often described as mirror opposites — doubles who reflect each other’s qualities in distorted form. Write an essay analyzing the most important similarities and differences between the two characters. What is Shelley’s purpose in making them mirror one another?
- Henry Clerval serves as a character foil to Victor Frankenstein. Write an essay analyzing how Clerval’s values, relationships, and approach to life highlight Victor’s flaws. What does Shelley want the reader to understand through this contrast?
- Captain Walton frames the novel and introduces its central themes before Victor ever speaks. Write an essay analyzing Walton as a character. In what ways is he similar to Victor? What is Shelley’s purpose in giving him this role?
Parenthood, Responsibility, and the Creator’s Obligation
- Mary Shelley draws a sharp contrast between Victor’s parents, who are loving and devoted, and Victor’s treatment of his own creation. Write an essay analyzing what Shelley is saying about the obligations of a creator to what they bring into the world.
- The creature tells Victor: “Remember that I am thy creature; I ought to be thy Adam.” Write an essay analyzing this statement. What does the creature mean? What does Shelley want the reader to understand about responsibility, parenthood, and the consequences of abandonment?
- Victor frequently blames fate and “the angel of his destruction” for the events of the novel. Write an essay analyzing the degree to which Victor is responsible for what happens. Is he a victim of circumstance, or does his own behavior drive the tragedy? Use specific evidence from the text.
- Write an essay on this question: At what point, if ever, does Victor Frankenstein accept genuine responsibility for his actions? What is the difference between feeling guilt and taking responsibility? Use specific moments from the novel to support your argument.
Dialogue, Word Choice, and Craft
- Shelley’s word choice is one of the most distinctive elements of Frankenstein. Choose two or three elements of her style (figurative language, imagery, tone, mood, the use of allusion, etc.) and write an essay analyzing how she uses language to create character, establish mood, and develop theme.
- Shelley uses descriptions of the natural world throughout the novel to reflect the internal states of her characters. Write an essay analyzing this technique. Choose three or four examples and explain how the natural setting mirrors what is happening emotionally or thematically at that moment in the novel.
- The creature’s narration in the middle section of the novel is elegant, eloquent, and emotionally sophisticated. Write an essay analyzing the effect of this choice. Why does Shelley give the creature this voice?
- Choose one extended passage from Frankenstein and write a close analysis of Shelley’s word choice. Identify the specific elements she uses and explain how her choices create meaning and emotional impact.
Allusion and Intertextuality
- Frankenstein is subtitled The Modern Prometheus. Write an essay analyzing the connections between the myth of Prometheus and the events of Shelley’s novel. How does the myth illuminate Victor’s character, his fate, and Shelley’s themes?
- Shelley gives the creature access to three texts: Plutarch’s Lives, Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther, and Milton’s Paradise Lost. She shows how each shapes his understanding of himself and the world. Write an essay analyzing what the creature takes from these books and what Shelley’s choice of these three texts reveals about her themes.
- The creature compares himself to both Adam and Satan from Milton’s Paradise Lost. Write an essay analyzing this comparison. In what ways does the creature resemble Adam? In what ways does he resemble Satan? What does Shelley gain by drawing on both comparisons simultaneously?
- Captain Walton alludes to “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” early in the novel. Write an essay analyzing the connections between Coleridge’s poem and Frankenstein. What does the allusion prepare the reader to expect? How do the poem’s themes of punishment, isolation, and the consequences of a thoughtless act illuminate the novel?
Symbolism
| Fire Lightning Light and darkness Ice and cold The Arctic / frozen sea Mountains | Chaotic weather Ships and voyages The trapped ship The rocky island Ruined castles Nature retreats | Beautiful landscapes Hands / strangulation The albatross Beautiful people Captain Walton’s journey Desolate places |
- Choose one symbolic element in Frankenstein and write an essay explaining how Shelley uses it to develop one or more of her themes. Analyze at least three specific moments in the novel where the symbol appears.
- Shelley uses the motif of isolation throughout the novel. Write an essay analyzing how isolation functions in Frankenstein. Which characters experience it? What causes it? What does Shelley suggest are its consequences?
- Analyze Shelley’s use of symbolism generally. To accomplish this, choose several symbolic elements from the novel and analyze each in terms of representation and purpose/effect. You may link two or more closely related symbols into one analysis if appropriate.
After Reading: Essay Prompts on Themes, Arguments, and Personal Perspectives
These prompts work best once students have finished the novel and had time to discuss it. They require students to synthesize their understanding of the whole work, form and defend interpretations, and connect Shelley’s writing to broader questions about human nature and society.
Theme Essays
Frankenstein develops themes across a wide range of subjects. The following is list of theme subjects from the novel:
| Ambition and hubris Responsibility and guilt Parenthood Isolation and human bonds Appearances and prejudice Nature vs. nurture Knowledge and its dangers Justice and its failures The natural world | Revenge Fate vs. free will Evil and its origins Rebellion Compassion Science and industry Romanticism and the sublime Social class Childhood and innocence | Death and suicide Homelands and belonging Imitation and the doppelgänger Greatness and its costs Discovery and curiosity Faith and the divine Enlightenment vs. Romanticism Learning Regret and irreversibility |
- Identify one of Mary Shelley’s themes in Frankenstein and write an essay analyzing how she develops her message. Your essay should identify an accurate theme statement and analyze its development using specific textual evidence — key characters, key dialogue, key scenes, symbols, and motifs.
- In your expert opinion, what is the single most important theme to Mary Shelley in Frankenstein? How do you know? How does she put this message at the novel’s core? Write an essay defending your interpretation.
- Choose two of Shelley’s themes and write an essay explaining how they interact and develop together. How does each theme reinforce or complicate the other? What does their interaction reveal about Shelley’s central message? (Strong pairings: guilt and justice; ambition and human bonds; nature and science; knowledge and innocence.)
- Choose one of Shelley’s themes about which you have strong views. Write an essay comparing your own view on the subject to Shelley’s. Use evidence from the novel to represent her position accurately. Where do you agree? Where do you disagree?
Science, Responsibility, and Society
“Science run amuck” is one of the most enduring concerns that readers take from Frankenstein, and it is as relevant now as it was in 1818.
- Shelley issues a warning in Frankenstein about what happens when scientific ambition outpaces ethical consideration. Write an essay arguing whether this warning is still relevant today. Identify a specific example of contemporary scientific, technological, or industrial development and analyze it through the lens of Shelley’s themes.
- Victor Frankenstein’s tragedy is partly the result of pursuing knowledge without considering the consequences. Write an essay arguing what obligations scientists and innovators have to consider the potential harms of their work before proceeding. Use evidence from the novel and from real-world examples to support your argument.
- Frankenstein suggests that the desire to create, discover, and achieve is both humanity’s greatest strength and its greatest danger. Write an essay arguing for or against this idea. What does Shelley say about ambition, and do you agree with her?
Justice and Society
- Shelley portrays the justice system in Frankenstein as fundamentally broken. It is incapable of identifying the guilty, protecting the innocent, or producing fair outcomes. Write an essay analyzing how Shelley develops this critique. Use specific examples from Justine’s trial, the creature’s experiences, and the magistrate’s response to Victor.
- The creature argues that he deserves to be heard and judged fairly before any condemnation. Write an essay analyzing what Shelley is saying about the relationship between appearance, prejudice, and justice. Is the creature’s argument compelling? Use evidence from the novel.
- Write an essay on this question: Is justice possible in a society that judges people largely by their outward appearance? Use Frankenstein as your primary source and draw on at least one additional example from history or current events.
Feminist Perspectives
- Elizabeth Lavenza is described throughout the novel in terms of beauty, virtue, and devotion. Write an essay analyzing how Shelley uses Elizabeth’s character. Does her role reinforce or critique the gender expectations of 1818? What does her fate suggest about Shelley’s themes?
- Mary Shelley’s mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, was one of the founding feminist philosophers. Yet the women of Frankenstein (Elizabeth, Justine, Caroline, Safie, and Agatha) occupy almost entirely passive roles. Write an essay arguing whether Frankenstein is a feminist novel, an anti-feminist novel, or something more complicated. Use specific evidence from the text and address the strongest counterargument to your position.
- Compare the roles of the women in Frankenstein, Caroline, Elizabeth, Justine, Safie, and Agatha. Write an essay analyzing how each woman is positioned within the novel. What patterns emerge? What might Shelley be saying — intentionally or not — about the place of women in the world she depicts?
Romanticism and Human Nature
- Frankenstein is a foundational text of the Romantic movement. Write an essay explaining how the novel exemplifies Romanticism. Consider the role of nature, the critique of science and industry, the emphasis on emotion and the sublime, and the novel’s treatment of the individual. Are there any ways in which the novel does not fit neatly within Romanticism?
- Shelley depicts nature as a restorative force throughout the novel. Write an essay analyzing what Shelley is saying about the relationship between human wellbeing and the natural world. What does Victor lose by turning away from nature, and what does he find when he returns to it?
- Frankenstein raises deep questions about what it means to be human. Write an essay arguing whether the creature is, in fact, more human than Victor Frankenstein by the end of the novel. Use specific evidence to defend your position.
Argument Essays
- Your literary society has been asked to remove one of the following characters from a new adaptation of Frankenstein: Henry Clerval, Captain Walton, or Justine Moritz. Write a proposal arguing which character is least essential to the novel. Your argument should explain the importance of the other two characters and anticipate the strongest objection to your choice.
- Is Frankenstein still relevant today? Write an essay arguing for or against the continuing relevance of the novel. Address at least two specific elements (a theme, a character, a conflict, or an aspect of historical context) and explain what they do or do not speak to in the present moment.
- The creature requests a companion, arguing that Victor owes him the chance at happiness and human connection. Write an essay arguing whether Victor made the right decision in destroying the second creature. Consider the competing obligations, potential consequences, and what Shelley’s themes suggest about the correct choice.
Shelley’s Life and the Novel
- Frankenstein was published anonymously in 1818, and many readers assumed the author was male. Write an essay analyzing what the novel reveals about its author’s experiences and perspectives. What can we infer about Mary Shelley from the choices she made in writing this novel?
The formatted essay prompts with planning pages, thesis guidance, and writing organizers are part of the Frankenstein Assignments and Extension Tasks. For the complete unit including 21 lessons, reading quizzes, and a final test, see the Frankenstein Unit and Teacher Guide.
More Frankenstein teaching posts:
- Frankenstein Discussion Questions
- Frankenstein Pre-Reading Activities
- Frankenstein Anticipation Guide
- Frankenstein Unit Plan
- Frankenstein Reading Schedule
- Frankenstein Unit Test
- All Frankenstein posts →
M. Towle is a veteran Language Arts and Social Studies teacher with fourteen years of classroom experience in urban schools in Los Angeles and Philadelphia. M. Towle holds an M.A. in Holocaust and Genocide Studies and is the founder of TeachNovels.com.
