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Introduction to Mary Shelley and Frankenstein
Gothic Literature Introduction to Mary Shelley and Frankenstein
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Origin 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”.
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Background The word “Gothic” derives from “Goth,” the name of one of the barbaric Germanic tribes that invaded the Roman Empire. Gothic literature derives its name from its similarities to the Gothic medieval cathedrals, which featured majestic, unrestrained architectural style with often savage or grotesque ornamentation.
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Style Gothic literature focuses on humanity’s fascination with the grotesque, the unknown, and the frightening. The Gothic creates horror by portraying human individuals in confrontation with the overwhelming, mysterious, terrifying forces found in the cosmos and within themselves. Gothic literatures showcases the dilemma of duality – humans are divided in the conflict between opposing forces in the world and themselves.
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Themes Human nature’s depravity
Struggle between good and evil in the human soul Existence of unexplainable elements in humanity and the cosmos
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Setting A castle, ruined or intact, haunted or not;
Ruined buildings which are sinister or which arouse a pleasing melancholy; Dungeons, underground passages, crypts, and catacombs; Labyrinth, dark corridors, and winding stairs; Shadows, a beam of moonlight in the blackness, a flickering candle; Extreme landscapes, like rugged mountains, thick forests, icy wastes, and extreme weather.
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Motifs A motif is a repeated theme, image, or literary device.
Forbidden knowledge or power Monster/satanic hero/fallen man Multiple narrative/spiral narrative Dreams/visions Signs/Omens
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Romanticism Artistic, literary, and intellectual movement.
18th to mid-19th century. During the Renaissance. People thought that people who lived during the Middle Ages were much happier than people who lived in their own time. Joseph Mallord William Turner The Fighting Temerarie
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Characteristics of Romanticism
Interest in the common man and childhood Strong emotions, senses, and feelings Love of nature Celebration of the individual Interested in the supernatural, mythical, gothic, and exotic Attracted to rebellion Emphasis on introspection Thomas Cole – A Wild Scene
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Mary Shelley Born in London August 30, 1797; Died February 1, 1851, at age 54 from a brain tumor. Assumed to be the 1st feminist author. Parents were thinkers, movers, and surrounded her with the greatest minds of the time.
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Biography Continued At 16 she ran away with Percy Bysshe Shelley, a poet, who was already married. She wrote Frankenstein when she was 18. Around that time, Percy’s wife committed suicide, so Mary and Percy “reluctantly” married. They moved to Italy to escape public scrutiny. Two of their three children died in Italy. When Mary was 24, Percy drowned. She never remarried, despite numerous offers. She said she wanted her last child to keep his father’s name.
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Origin of Frankenstein
Vacationed with husband, Percy Shelley, Lord Byron, and Jane Claiment one summer on Lake Geneva in Switzerland. Unseasonably cold; for entertainment they would tell ghost stories. On June 15, 1816, they challenged each other with who could write the most terrifying story.
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Frankenstein Frankenstein is based on life experiences, dreams, scientific research, and experiments of the time period. Scientists in the 1800’s were obsessed with bring the dead back to life. Shelley was fascinated with this idea and stayed current with the news.
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Frankenstein Suffered nightmares in 1815 after her daughter died two weeks after birth. Repeatedly dreamed she brought her baby back to life by massaging her next to a warm fire. One June 15, 1816, she dreamed of “a pale student of unhallowed arts creates a living being from dead parts.” - Frankenstein
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Frankenstein Shelley was the only one of the four to complete her tale of terror. Frankenstein was published in 1818, when she was 21. Though she wrote other works, none lived up to the popularity of her first.
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