Aesthetics

Birth Motif in Frankenstein

Canon

    "4. The collection or list of books of the Bible accepted by the Christian Church as genuine and inspired. Also transf., any set of sacred books; also, those writings of a secular author accepted as authentic" ("Canon").

    "The unique place of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) in the canon has much to do with what it has engendered. Widely appropriated and transformed in popular culture, Shelley's tale of transgressive creation and vengeful destruction has also issued forth an unruly brood of high-culture interpretive and imaginative offspring" (Ball 31).

Chivalry

In Shelley, p. 21, 83 (2.5)

Citizen

See also Human

Class


Creature

Demon

     "In ancient Greek mythology (= δαίμων): A supernatural being of a nature intermediate between that of gods and men; an inferior divinity, spirit, genius (including the souls or ghosts of deceased persons, esp. deified heroes). Often written dæmon for distinction from sense 2: An evil spirit.
      a. (Representing δαιμόνιον of the LXX and N.T. (rarely δαίμων); in Vulgate dæmonium, dæmon). Applied to the idols or gods of the heathen, and to the ‘evil’ or ‘unclean spirits’ by which demoniacs were possessed or actuated" ("Demon").

    See also Gothic

Doubles

    related to Dichotomies 

- nature / city
- man / monster
- man / woman

- writer / reader

Empire

Europe

Genre

Scholars trace Frankenstein to the gothic novel, the Bildungsroman, memoir, and travel literature (see Novel).


Gothic


Fuseli

Johann Heinrich Füssli, The Nightmare (1781), Oil on Canvas, Institute of Fine Arts, Detroit

History

Human


Language

"a godlike science"  (Shelley 77)

    > Shelley's language?

Law

In Shelley: Justine's tale, 69 (2.2), 83, 85, 87 (2.6), 160 (3.7)

Literature

Monster reads a novel of sensibility about a man who kills himself for love (Werther); an epic poem about good, evil, God, and Satan (Milton's Paradise Lost); and an historical treatise on republicanism and great figures (Plutarch's Lives, one of the most popular Classical texts Romantic-era writers read), all texts MWS read in 1815 (Gilbert and Gubar 331) (86).

For Shelley, "books appear to have functioned as her surrogate parents, pages and words standing in for flesh and blood" (Gilbert and Gubar 331).


Monster

"The monster in Shelley's novel is denied that status of a fellow creature because . . . Frankenstein never realizes that monster, like giant, is only a trope. He never realizes that the appellation 'gigantic monster' is only a figure for a man: a figure of a man. Frankenstein, in short, is not a good reader" (Marshall 206).


            Related to Golem


Mont Blanc

Mont Blanc
Mt. Blanc, Switzerland

Narrative


     "2b. Literary Criticism. The part of a text, esp. a work of fiction, which represents the sequence of events, as distinguished from that dealing with dialogue, description, etc.; narration as a literary method or genre."

    > Multiple narrators:

    Walton's letters to his sister, Mrs. (Walton) Saville (1-17)
    M. (= Monsieur) Victor Frankenstein's tale

    Alphonse's letter
    Elizabeth's letter

    the monster's tale
    Felix DeLacey and Safie's tale

Noble Savage

The noble savage counters traditional European discourse that categorizes non-Christian populations as "savage" (l'homme sauvage) and immoral.

Race


Religion


Republic "Unlike every other character in the novel, the monster has no republic, town or nation to call his own" (McLane 966).

Rights of Man

    Jefferson, Thomas. The Declaration of Independence, 1776. Washington, D. C.: Dept. of State, 1911. Print.

    "Declaration of the Rights of Man" (1789). Avalon Project 2008 <http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/rightsof.asp> Accessed Jan. 2012.

    Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790)
    Thomas Paine, The Rights of Man (1791-92)
    Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790)

    Gouges, Olympe de. "Declaration of the Rights of Woman and Female Citizen" 2010. Prof. Mark Traugott, History 171: Revolutions in France <http://ic.ucsc.edu/~traugott/hist171/readings/1791Rights%20of%20Woman> Accessed Jan. 2012. Rpt. in Darline Gav Levy, H. Applewhite, and M. Johnson, eds., Women in Revolutionary Paris, 1785­-1795. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1980. 87-96. Web.

    "The nonhuman monster seeks to inherit the rights of man and the citizen from his progenitor" (Reese 49).

    From P. B. Shelley, "Declaration of Rights" (1812): "A man has not only a right to express his thoughts, but it is his duty to do so" (n. pag.).

Romanticism

Vol. I:  Closely analyze one of the scenes below. What characteristics and traits of European Romantic literature do they reflect?

1. p. 10: Robert Walton’s letter to his sister

2. p. 22: Victor Frankenstein’s medieval education

3. p. 32: Frankenstein’s motivation to create new life

4. p. 39: First page of Elizabeth’s letter 

5. p. 53: Justine


Science

For example, the creature refers to reading as a "science" (Shelley 78/2.4).

- Holmes, Richard. The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science. 1st U.S. ed. New York: Pantheon Books, 2008. Print. (Sprague Lib.: Q127.G4 H65 2008)


- Richardson, Alan. British Romanticism and the Science of the Mind. Cambridge: Cambridge University press, 2001. Print. (Sprague Library Call #: PR149.S4 R52 2005)

Sensibility

Slave

See also Shelley 120, 159

Species


    "A class composed of individuals having some common qualities or characteristics, freq. as a subdivision of a larger class or genus" ("Species").

    "It is Victor--the human being, the natural philosopher, the population theorist--who emerges dominant, both in terms of species competition and in the utility of his education. The course of the novel suggests that the principle of population, of species competition in a world become suddenly too small, trumps the principle of benevolence" (McLane 983).

    "This escalated threat of the monster's species-being drives the Doctor to desire to murder his creation genocidally. It is not the daemon alone whom the Doctor must destroy but his race, and this race, in turn, would already come into conceptual being through any acknowledgment of the claim that the monster voices" (Reese 53).

    "Shelley's Frankenstein thus renders a specifically modern dilemma of embodiment, and the monster walks the earth as a disassociated species being inopportunely individual and adrift. In his figure he comprehends man and citizen at once, but he can no more unify these identities than does the Declaration" (Reese 65-6).

    "everlasting war against the species" (Shelley 95)

    See also 155, sensibility (Smith)

Sympathy


    "The quality or state of being affected by the condition of another with a feeling similar or corresponding to that of the other; the fact or capacity of entering into or sharing the feelings of another or others; fellow-feeling. Also, a feeling or frame of mind evoked by and responsive to some external influence. Const. with (a person, etc., or a feeling)" ("Sympathy").

    "Frankenstein can be read . . . as a parable about the failure of sympathy" (Marshall 195).

    "Using terms and formulations that have their source in discussions of sympathy in eighteenth-century moral philosophy and aesthetics, Mary Shelley focuses on the epistemology and the rhetoric of fellow feeling--which, she shows, raise questions about identification, resemblance, likeness, difference, comparison, and the ability to transport oneself into someone else's thoughts and sentiments" (Marshall 198).

    Shelley 91/2.7, 102-03/2.9


    See also Sensibility

Sublime

Terror See also Questions

Vitalism

"The doctrine or theory that the origin and phenomena of life are due to or produced by a vital principle, as distinct from a purely chemical or physical force" ("Vitalism").
Vocabulary

charnel house (32) = house for dead bodies, where bones are piled up

dun (34) = dull & dingy brown, like a mouse

What names does Victor call himself, and his creation?

- creation: "monster" (35, 60, 65, 88, 90), "daemon" (15, 48, 54, 65), "wretch" (34, 48, 65/50), "creature" (34),  "daemonical corpse" (35), "hideous guest" (37), "my enemy," "being" (48), "my creation" (49), "fiend" (60), "vile insect" (65)

-  Victor: "noble creature" (Walton, 15), "creature" (19, 44)
, "creator" (creation, 66)

- Justine says: "Ever since I was condemned, my confessor has besieged me; he threatened and menaced, until I almost began to think that I was the monster that he said I was" (56).


- His creation calls himself "thy creature," "Adam," a "fallen angel," and "devil" (66)


Sublime


Similarities between Rousseau's Confessions, Goethe, and Shelley's Frankenstein