This document is a presentation on the topic of myth and morality in Frankenstein. It briefly defines myth and morality, discusses how myths and morality are portrayed in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Specifically, it explores the confusion in the monster's personality as a myth, and examines the characters of Victor and the monster to analyze the themes of pursuing knowledge, risking nature's laws, murder, and a sense of justice in relation to morality. It concludes by looking at clashes between myth and morality in the novel, such as hunger for knowledge, forbidden fruit, creating life, acting against God, and death.