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Frankenstein

Frankenstein. “The Modern Prometheus”. Journal Write. What do you think of when you hear the word “Frankenstein”? What images, memories, or feelings arise in your mind? Based off of what you know, who is Frankenstein?. Mary Shelley. Born in 1797 in London, England

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Frankenstein

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  1. Frankenstein “The Modern Prometheus”

  2. Journal Write • What do you think of when you hear the word “Frankenstein”? What images, memories, or feelings arise in your mind? • Based off of what you know, who is Frankenstein?

  3. Mary Shelley • Born in 1797 in London, England • Mother, Mary, was a feminist writer • Dies shortly after Mary (Jr.) was born • Father was a writer • Married Mary Clairmont after losing his first wife • Mary Shelley experienced bitter times growing up • Cruel stepmother and emotionally distant father

  4. Continued… • Met her future husband, Percy, at the age of 16 • He was also a famous poet • Had a daughter, Clara, who died a few weeks after her birth • Soon after son, William, was born • All traveled through France, Germany, & Switzerland (the novel takes place in these places) • Married in 1816 in London

  5. Tragic Life • Began writing Frankenstein in 1816 while in Switzerland • Inspired by sailing trips and telling ghost stories) • A second daughter, Clara, was born but died a year later • Percy Jr. was born in 1819 (the same year William died) • In 1822 Mary had a miscarriage which almost ended her life • In the same year, Percy Sr. was sailing and a storm sank the ship • His body washed ashore

  6. The End of Her Life… • Devastated by her loss, Shelley returned back to England with her son, Percy • Worked on writing many novels • Died in 1851 (fifty-four years old) from a brain tumor

  7. The Creation of Frankenstein • One night, when Mary was visiting the Swiss Alps with her husband and friends, they began telling ghost stories • Her friend, Byron, challenged her to come up with a ghost story • The next day she began writing Frankenstein and a year later she finished her book • It was published in 1818, when Shelley was 21 years old • Book was published anonymously originally • People criticized the book claiming it to be “a tissue of horrible and disgusting absurdity”.

  8. The Romantic Movement • A movement in the late 18th century, which emphasizes emotion, imagination, intuition, freedom, personal experience, the beauty of nature, the exotic, and even the grotesque. • Often contained the idea of the disenfranchised man • Men who found themselves unable to live in society • Supernatural • Make ordinary and everyday things wonderful and inspiring

  9. Continued.. • Began as a reaction against Enlightenment ideals (using reason and knowledge) • Writers were trying to create a new kind of poetry that emphasized intuition over reason and the nature over the urban

  10. Thus, Romantic writing is a spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings (not necessarily love)

  11. The Development of Science = FEAR for the Romantics • Prior to the 18th century science and philosophy were the same thing • Some science experiments that may have jump-stated Mary’s imagination • Luigi Galvani- made frog legs twitch by poking them with electrodes • Giovanni Aldini did the same but with human limbs • Johann Dippel robbed graves and did diabolical experiments on the corpses • The work of these scientists was important; led to eletro-shock therapy and cardiac defibrillation

  12. Gothic Style1764-1820 • Offshoot of Romantic literature • Created the first horror movies • The Gothic creates feelings of gloom, mystery, and suspense and tends to the dramatic and the sensational • The most common feature of Gothic literature is the indication of mood through weather • When bad things are going to happen, a storm will occur before

  13. Gothic Architecture • The tall spires and vaulting arches of medieval cathedrals likewise expressed the human ambition to transcend the natural world and touch the supernatural realm • Gothic literature derives its name from its similarities to the Gothic medieval cathedrals, which feature a majestic, architectural style with often savage or grotesque ornamentation

  14. Gothic literature attempts to unmask the horrific aspects of human nature • Monsters such as vampires in Gothic works tend to externalize our own dangerous repressed desires • Gothic literature pictures the human condition as mixture of good and evil powers. Thus, the Gothic perspective conceives of the human condition as a paradox— humans are divided in the conflict between opposing forces in the world and in themselves • Gothic themes focus on the existence of unexplainable elements in humanity and the cosmos

  15. Gothic Elements • Gothic horror genre or mode of literature that combines elements of both horror and romance • Writers in the Gothic Period utilized specific elements while writing to create the gothic and creepy mood. • Many famous authors like Shelley (Frankenstein), Stoker (Dracula), and Poe have used these elements and while reading their texts, you notice they all have a similar mood.

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