
The fact that Frankenstein never gives the monster a name adds to the creature's lack of identity, or "self." So it's interesting that, over time, the creature itself has become known as Frankenstein. The monster has assumed the creator's identity in the public consciousness. The monster IS Frankenstein, and Victor is just the mad scientist. I wonder if this means that we associate Victor as being just as evil and nefarious as the monster, or if we simply want a quick way of identifying the monster?
I was frustrated with the lack of description in the monster's appearance. I wonder how we ever came to associate the bolts-in-neck green-faced Herman Munster with this thing when Shelley is so silent on what it looks like. Personally, I think not knowing makes it much more frightening. The hulking, lighting-flashed silhouette of the monster on the mountaintop is much more frightening, or "uncanny," because, as Freud would argue, it is both recognizable and strange at the same time.
Another thing I noticed was how much water there was in this book. They seem to constantly be at sea, or travelling on the Rhone, or Victor is out alone on a boat, alone. The water seemed to bring peace, or at least temporary calm, and solitude to both the monster and Frankenstein. Victor used his moments out in the boats to feel depressed and reflect on the horrible things that were happening to him, and the monster eventually comes to terms with the evil in his acts when he is at sea with dead Victor. I wonder if this was a conscious decision on Shelley's part.