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Frankenstein

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Title: Frankenstein


1
Frankenstein
  • "The Modern Prometheus"

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  • According to the Greeks, Prometheus stole fire
    from the gods to give to the humans so they could
    improve their lives. As punishment, he was
    chained to a rock, where an eagle each day
    plucked at his liver.
  • Similarly, Mary Shelley's arrogant scientist,
    Victor Frankenstein, claimed "benevolent
    intentions, and thirsted for the moment when I
    should put them in practice."
  • Frankenstein endures not only because of its
    infamous horrors but for the richness of the
    ideas it asks us to confront--human
    accountability, social alienation, and the nature
    of life itself.

4
Frankensteins Mother
  • Mary Shelley
  • I busied myself to think of a storyOne which
    would speak to the mysterious fears of our nature
    and awaken thrilling horror.

5
Mary Shelley
  • Mary Shelley was born into a family of the
    British artistic and intellectual elite. Her
    mother was the feminist Mary Wollstonecraft. Her
    father was William Godwin, a political
    philosopher and novelist.
  • While Mary Shelley drew her inspiration from a
    dream, she drew her story's premises about the
    nature of life from the work of some of Europe's
    premier scientists and thinkers
  • Heard Samuel Taylor Coleridges Rime of the
    Ancient Mariner recited when she was a child.
  • Her sophisticated creature read Plutarch and
    Goethe, spoke eloquently, and suffered much.

6
Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Although she died approximately a week after her
    daughter was born, Wollstonecrafts writings and
    reputation were important to the young Mary
    Wollstonecraft Godwin

7
William Godwin
  • Did not formally educate his daughter, Mary, but
    encouraged her to read from his well-stocked
    library
  • Hosted intellectual gatherings with conversations
    a young Mary overheard

8
You couldnt make this up
  • At fifteen, Mary met the poet Percy Shelley, who
    was married at the time. Two years later, she ran
    off with him to France. They were married in
    December 1816, two weeks after Percy Shelley's
    first wife drowned. By then Mary had already
    borne him two children.
  • She ultimately gave birth to 4 children in 5
    years, three of whom died as infants.
  • The Shelleys traveled throughout Switzerland,
    Germany, and Italy, visiting friends, studying
    languages and art, and writing.
  • Percy Shelley died in 1822 in a boating accident.
  • Mary returned to England and supported her
    children and her father with her writing.

9
It was a dark and stormy night literally
  • In the summer of 1816, nineteen-year-old Mary
    Wollstonecraft Godwin and her lover, the poet
    Percy Shelley, visited the poet Lord Byron at his
    villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland.
  • Stormy weather frequently forced them indoors,
    where they and Byron's other guests sometimes
    read from a volume of ghost stories.
  • One evening, Byron challenged his guests to each
    write one themselves. Mary's story, inspired by a
    dream, eventually became the novel Frankenstein.

10
Percy Shelley
  • Many people assumed Frankenstein was written by
    Percy Shelley since Mary did not attach her name
    to the first edition, printed in 1818, and Percy
    wrote the preface.

11
Art imitates life or science
  • Shelley's story did not arise from just her
    imagination.
  • Scientists and physicians of her time, tantalized
    by the elusive boundary between life and death,
    probed it through experiments with lower
    organisms, human anatomical studies, attempts to
    resuscitate drowning victims, and experiments
    using electricity to restore life to the recently
    dead.

12
  • When Percy Shelley's first wife, Harriet, drowned
    in London in 1816, rescuers took her lifeless
    body to a receiving station of the London
    Society.
  • There, smelling salts, vigorous shaking,
    electricity, and artificial respiration--as with
    the resuscitation bellows shown here--had been
    used since the 1760s to restore drowning victims
    to life.

13
  • In March 1815, Mary Shelley dreamed of her dead
    infant daughter held before a fire, rubbed
    vigorously, and restored to life.
  • At the time, scientists would not have wholly
    dismissed such a possibility.
  • Could the dead be brought back to life? Could
    life arise spontaneously from inorganic matter?
  • Physicians of the day treated such questions
    seriously and wrote treatises and articles
    claiming many successes.

14
  • During the 1790s, Italian physician Luigi Galvani
    demonstrated what we now understand to be the
    electrical basis of nerve impulses when he made
    frog muscles twitch by jolting them with a spark
    from an electrostatic machine.
  • When Frankenstein was published, however, the
    word galvanism implied the release, through
    electricity, of mysterious life forces.
  • "Perhaps," Mary Shelley recalled of her talks
    with Lord Byron and Percy Shelley, "a corpse
    would be reanimated galvanism had given token of
    such things."

15
Romanticism
  • Approximately 1800-1830s
  • Reaction to and rejection of Age of Reason and
    Classicism (logos)
  • Focus on the individual, subjective, irrational,
    emotional, and transcendent (pathos)
  • Found beauty in the natural world, saying it was
    a place of solace, but dangerous if man attempted
    to exert control over nature

16
Romanticism and the Individual
  • Romantics were preoccupied by the genius, the
    hero, and the exceptional figure
  • Focused on his or her passions and individual
    struggles
  • Saw the artist as a supreme individual
    creator whose creative spirit is more important
    than adherence to traditional rules or procedures
  • Emphasized imagination and belief in the
    supernatural which led to the creation of

17
the Gothic Novel
  • Invented almost single-handedly by Horace Walpole
    with The Castle of Otranto (1764)
  • Walpole's novel was imitated not only in the
    eighteenth century and not only in the novel
    form, but it has influenced the novel, the short
    story, poetry, and even film-making up to the
    present day.

18
Archetypes of Gothic Novel
  • Gothic Hero isolated either voluntarily or
    involuntarily
  • Villain epitome of evil, either by his (usually
    a man) own fall from grace, or by some implicit
    malevolence
  • The Wanderer, as found in many Gothic tales, is
    the epitome of isolation as he wanders the earth
    in perpetual exile, usually a form of divine
    punishment

19
Elements of Gothic Novel
  • Set in castle/old house/cave
  • Atmosphere of mystery and suspense
  • Omens, portents, visions
  • Overwrought emotion
  • Women in distress
  • Women threatened by powerful male
  • Metonymy of gloom and horror (rain stands for
    sorrow, etc.)
  • Vocabulary of the gothic

20
Frame Narrative
  • The frame-within-frame-within-frame form
    parallels the search in the story for something
    deep, dark, and secret at the heart of the
    narrative.
  • The form thus also resembles the psychoanalytic
    process of peeling back layers of repressive
    narratives put in place by the conscious mind to
    reveal the unconscious.

21
  • First, Robert Walton sets down on paper the
    events of his meetings with a stranger, who turns
    out to be Victor Frankenstein.
  • Frankenstein relates his story to Robert Walton.
  • Frankensteins creature relates his own tale to
    his creator.
  • Leads us to question the reasons behind each of
    the narrations since the teller of each story is
    a character with shortcomings, prejudices, and
    motives.

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