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Mary Shelley (1797-1851)

Mary Shelley (1797-1851) . (You don’t need to copy this part of the notes but you are expected to know Shelley’s background and how it shapes her writing) Born : Somers Town, England Parents: feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and philosopher William Godwin. .

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Mary Shelley (1797-1851)

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  1. Mary Shelley (1797-1851) • (You don’t need to copy this part of the notes but you are expected to know Shelley’s background and how it shapes her writing) • Born: Somers Town, England • Parents: feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and philosopher William Godwin.

  2. Mom had an affair with a military captain which resulted in her first child, Fanny.  Soldier abandoned them. Mom attempted suicide.  Later met Godwin, had an affair.  Got pregnant again (w/ Mary) and they married to legitimate both kids • Wollstonecraft dies as the result of Mary's birth. Mary is then raised by her resentful father and an evil stepmother

  3. Shelley learned about her mother only through writings her mother left behind, including A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792) which advocated that women should have the same educational opportunities as rights in society as men. • Avid reader and scholar and knew through her father some of the most important men of the time (William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge)

  4. a lot of famous writers traced through their house-friends of her father (Percy Shelley, Coleridge, Charles Lamb) • When she was 9, she and her stepsister hid under a sofa to hear Samuel Taylor Coleridge recite “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”, a poem which influenced her when writing Frankenstein

  5. Dad remarries, Mary Jane Clairmont—mean woman        -Clairmont tried to train Mary in the “womanly arts” but all Mary would do was read and write • In her young teens Clairmont sends Mary to live at Ramsgate with a Miss Petman.  While there took some time off to travel to Scotland with a friend of the family

  6. -Returned home, a woman.  Became close with her father who she regularly talked Philosophy with. -While spending time at home Mary is reintroduced to Percy Bysshe Shelley (a friend/follower of her father).  Percy is married, but they still fall in love (similar intellects)  -Father is outraged, but Shelley and Mary eventually run away together with the help of Fanny (Mary 16, Percy 21)

  7. -Life is tough for Mary & Percy.  Short on $-living in London -Percy’s wife, Harriet, bares him a belated son -Percy’s friend falls in love with Mary -Mary gets pregnant-has a daughter, who dies -Fanny commits suicide -Both are able to write and live as they please

  8. On a visit in Switzerland with PBS, Lord Byron, his mistress and his doctor, Polidori, she was challenged to write a “ghost” story. She had heard Byron and Shelley discussing “the nature of the principle of life and whether there was any chance of its ever being discovered.” From this conversation, she had the “waking dream” which eventually became the novel Frankenstein.

  9. Frankenstein is the only story of the four that was ever published as a novel. • Polidori wrote "The Vampyre," which is considered the first modern vampire story. The story was first published in the April 1819 issue of New Monthly Magazine, mistakenly under the name of Lord Byron.

  10. In November, Harriet drowns herself: Percy and Mary marry in December 1816. • Young Mary Shelley, at age 17, miscarried her first baby. She later wrote in a letter to friend Leigh Hunt.... "I dreamt that my little baby came to life again...that it had only been cold, and that we rubbed it before the fire, and it lived. Awake and find no baby. I think about the little thing all day. Not in good spirits."

  11. The last years of married life are filled with disaster for Mary. Her half sister dies as does another of her children. Mary becomes depressed, a tendency she probably inherited from her mother. She is only partly relieved by the birth of Percy, their only surviving child.

  12. Mary and Percy eventually move to Italy where Percy drowns during a sailing trip in 1822. Mary is determined to keep the memory of her late husband alive. She publishes several editions of Percy's writings and adds notes and prefaces to them.

  13. Lord Byron found Percy's body washed up on the shore of an Italian beach. Due to plague restrictions, the body must be burned on the beach. Percy's heart, however, refused to burn. Byron gave Mary the heart, and she kept it wrapped up in a copy of a poem Percy had written upon the death of his friend, John Keats.

  14. Mary continued to write her own novels, the most famous one being The Last Man (1826). This book deals with human isolation just as her earlier novel Frankenstein did. She writes numerous short stories and contributes biographical and critical studies to the Cabinet Cyclopædia.

  15. The last years of her life were spent in the company of her son and two good friends. She tried very hard to free herself from the strains put on her by being the daughter and wife of such well-known people. Mary Shelley died in 1851 at the age of fifty-three of a brain tumor.

  16. Historical Context – begin notes • Ambiguous Walton’s letters dated “17-” with no reference to anything specific to pinpoint the date. • It is set in the latter part of the 18th century, at the end of the Enlightenment and the beginning of the Romantic period. • It critiques the excesses of the Enlightenment and introduces the beliefs of the Romantics. • Reflects a shift in social and political thought – from humans as creatures who use science and reason to shape and control their destiny to humans as creatures who rely on their emotions to determine what is right.

  17. Ideas of the Enlightenment • Scientific observation of the outer world • Logic and reason; science and technology • Believed in following standards and traditions • Appreciated elegance and refinement • Interested in maintaining the aristocracy • Sought to follow and validate authority • Favored a social hierarchy • Nature should be controlled by humans

  18. Important Revolutions • American and French Revolution (call for individual freedom and an overthrow of rigid social hierarchy) • Industrial Revolution – social system challenged by change from agricultural society to industrial one with a large, impoverished and restless working class

  19. Romanticism Definition: • A movement of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that marked the reaction in literature, philosophy, art, religion, and politics to the formalism of the preceding (Neoclassic) period. • The Neoclassic period valued reason, formal rules, and demanded order in beauty.

  20. Visual Arts: Examples Romantic Art Neoclassical Art

  21. Characteristics of Romantic Period • Emphasis on imagination and emotion, individual passion and inspiration • Rejection of formal, upper class works and a preference for writing (poetry) that addresses personal experiences and emotions in simple, language • A turn to the past or an inner dream world that is thought to be more picturesque and magical than the current world (industrial age)

  22. Characteristics of Romantic Period • Belief in individual liberty; rebellious attitude against tyranny • Fascination with nature; perception of nature as transformative • Theme – “The sublime and the beautiful”

  23. Characteristics of Romantic Period • Concerned with common people • Favored democracy • Desired radical change • Individualism • Idealization of rural life • Enthusiasm for the wild, irregular, or grotesque in nature • Enthusiasm for the uncivilized or “natural” • Interest in human rights • Sentimentality • Melancholy • Interest in the gothic

  24. Supernatural And Gothic Literary Themes Supernatural motifs appear throughout literature but are most prominent in the literary genre labeled "Gothic," which developed in the late eighteenth-century and is devoted primarily to stories of horror, the fantastic, and the "darker" supernatural forces. The English Gothic novel originated with the publication of Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto (1765), which Walpole called a "Gothic story." Frankenstein belongs specifically to the Gothic genre.

  25. Like Gothic architecture, Gothic literature focuses on humanity’s fascination with the grotesque, the unknown, and the frightening, inexplicable aspects of the universe and the human soul. The Gothic "relates the individual to the infinite universe" (Varma 16) and creates horror by portraying human individuals in confrontation with the overwhelming, mysterious, terrifying forces found in the cosmos and within themselves. Gothic literature pictures the human condition as an ambiguous mixture of good and evil powers that cannot be understood completely by human reason.

  26. Thus, the Gothic perspective conceives of the human condition as a paradox, a dilemma of duality—humans are divided in the conflict between opposing forces in the world and in themselves. • The Gothic themes of human nature’s depravity, the struggle between good and evil in the human soul, and the existence of unexplainable elements in humanity and the cosmos, are prominent themes in Frankenstein.

  27. Style: Gothic Novel • Frankenstein is generally categorized as a Gothic novel, a genre of fiction that uses gloomy settings and supernatural events to create and atmosphere of mystery and terror. • Shelley adds to her development of the plot the use of psychological realism, delving into the psyches of the characters in an attempt to explain why they react as they do and what drives them to make their decisions.

  28. Supernatural/Gothic Literary Motifs A motif is a repeated theme, image, or literary device. Look for these common supernatural/Gothic motifs in Frankenstein.

  29. The Double or Doppelganger (German for "double-goer"): Defined by Federick S. Frank as "a second self or alternate identity, sometimes, but not always, a physical twin. The Doppelganger in demonic form can be a reciprocal or lower bestial self or a Mr. Hyde. Gothic doppelgangers often haunt and threaten the rational psyche of the victim to whom they become attached" (435).

  30. The double motif involves a comparison or contrast between two characters or sets of characters within a work to represent opposing forces in human nature. The double motif suggests that humans are burdened with a dual nature, a soul forever divided. Double characters are often paired in common relationships, such as twins, siblings, husband/wife, parent/child, hero/villain, creator/creature, etc.

  31. Forbidden Knowledge or Power/ Faust Motif:

  32. Forbidden Knowledge or Power/ Faust Motif: Forbidden knowledge/power is often the Gothic protagonist’s goal. The Gothic "hero" questions the universe’s ambiguous nature and tries to comprehend and control those supernatural powers that mortals cannot understand. He tries to overcome human limitations and make himself into a "god." This ambition usually leads to the hero’s "fall" or destruction; however, Gothic tales of ambition sometimes paradoxically evoke our admiration because they picture individuals with the courage to defy fate and cosmic forces in an attempt to transcend the mundane to the eternal and sublime.

  33. Monster/Satanic Hero/Fallen Man: The courageous search for forbidden knowledge or power always leads the hero to a fall, a corruption, or destruc- tion, such as Satan’s or Adam’s fall. Consequently, the hero in Gothic literature is often a "villain." The hero is isolated from others by his fall and either becomes a monster or confronts a monster who is his double. He becomes a "Satanic hero" if, like Satan, he has courageously defied the rules of God’s universe and has tried to transform himself into a god. Note: the mad scientist, who tries to transcend human limitations through science, is a type of Satanic hero that is popular in Gothic literature (examples include Dr. Jekyll and Frankenstein).

  34. Multiple Narrative/Spiral Narrative Method: The story is frequently told through a series of secret manuscripts or multiple tales, each revealing a deeper secret, so the narrative gradually spirals inward toward the hidden truth. The narrator is often a first-person narrator compelled to tell the story to a fascinated or captive listener (representing the captivating power of forbidden knowledge). By revealing to us their own souls’ secrets, these narrators reveal the secrets of humankind’s soul.

  35. Dreams/Visions: Terrible truths are often revealed to characters through dreams or visions. The hidden knowledge of the universe and of human nature emerges through dreams because, when the person sleeps, reason sleeps, and the supernatural, unreasonable world can break through. Dreams in Gothic literature express the dark, unconscious depths of the psyche that are repressed by reason— truths that are too terrible to be comprehended by the conscious mind.

  36. Signs/Omens: Reveal the intervention of cosmic forces and often represent psychological or spiritual conflict (e.g., flashes of lightning and violent storms might parallel some turmoil within a character’s mind).

  37. The Novel • This epistolary novel begins with letters written from Robert Walton to his sister. The point of these letters is to set up the pretense that this is a true story. This is a very popular technique at the time this novel was written. • In the letters, the story of Captain Walton unfolds. Eventually winding up in the Arctic circle and picks up Victor Frankenstein who relates his story to Captain Walton. The main part of the novel is this story, now no longer in letter form, but as Victor relates it.

  38. Robert Walton’s letters Frankenstein's story to Walton Creature's story to Frankenstein Structure and Point of View Frame Story Epistolary – carried by letters

  39. Frankenstein • She did not put her name on the novel when it was published in 1818. • Many assumed it had been written by her husband. • She attached her name to the novel in the 1831 edition.

  40. . . . or a Modern Prometheus • The complete title of this book is Frankenstein or a Modern Prometheus. • Byron, who was with Shelley when she began to write this novel, wrote a poem titled "Prometheus" that she would have been familiar with and inspired by • The story of Prometheus goes as follows:

  41. Prometheus was one of the titans that sided with Zeus and the gods against Cronus and the titans. Later, after the gods ruled and mankind was created, Prometheus desired to give mankind a gift of fire. Zeus forbade it since man would misuse it to make weapons and such and since if man had fire, they would not be as reliant on the gods. Prometheus stole some from Mt. Olympus and gave it to man. As a result, man was punished by Zeus giving them woman (horrors upon horrors!) and Prometheus was chained to a rock where an eagle (or vulture in some myths) eats his liver out everyday. Since he is immortal, it grows back only to be eaten again the next day. Hercules later rescued Prometheus (but nobody rescued man!).

  42. Just as Prometheus went too far to give mankind the mysteries of the gods, Victor goes too far in discovering the mysteries of God by trying to defy death and learn how to create life.

  43. Major Characters • Victor Frankenstein – protagonist, product of an idealistic Enlightenment education; fueled by possibilities of science and a desire for acclaim; becomes obsessed with creating life from spare body parts. Rational demeanor dissolves and by story’s end, consumed by primitive emotions of fear and hatred.

  44. Major Characters • The Creature - never named; is Victor’s doppelganger (alter ego); Creature rationally analyzes the society that rejects him; sympathetic character, admires people and wants to be a part of human society; only results in violence when he is repeatedly rejected

  45. The Legend of the Golem • The monster in Frankenstein is a flesh golem. Definition of a golem: • The word golem is used in the Bible to refer to an embryonic or incomplete substance: Psalm 139:16 uses the word "gal'mi", meaning "my unshaped form. Similarly, Golems are used today primarily in metaphor either as brainless lunks or as entities serving man under controlled conditions but enemies in others. Similarly, it is a Yiddish slang insult for someone who is clumsy or slow.

  46. Having a golem servant was seen as the ultimate symbol of wisdom and holiness, and there are many tales of golems connected to prominent rabbis throughout the Middle Ages

  47. The existence of a golem is in most stories portrayed as a mixed blessing. Although not overly intelligent, a golem can be made to perform simple tasks over and over. The problem is one of control or getting it to stop, bearing a resemblance to the story of the broomstick in The Sorcerer's Apprentice.

  48. Major Characters • Henry Clerval – Victor’s childhood friend; true romantic, wants to leave mark on the world, but never loses sight of “the moral relations of things • Elizabeth – adopted as an infant by Victor’s family; marries Victor • Robert Walton – Arctic explorer who’s obsessed with gaining knowledge and fame; rescues Victor in the Arctic; through letters to his sister, Mrs. Margaret Saville, he relates how he met Frankenstein and the fantastic story Frankenstein tells him

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