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Published byGrant Flynn Modified over 9 years ago
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“What is a Monster? (According to Frankenstein)” Peter Brooks
Prepared by: Dr. Kay Picart
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Aim: To discuss Brooks’ various characterizations of monstrosity
To discuss how the monstrous body is often envisaged in film and dance
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Monstrosity “The outcome or product of curiousity or epistemophilia pushed to an extreme that results—as in the story of Oedipus—in confusion, blindness, and exile.” (218)
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Monstrosity--2 It cannot be located in “any of the taxonomic schemes devised by the human mind to understand and to order nature.” (218)
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Monstrosity--3 It is an “excess of signification, a strange byproduct or leftover of the process of making meaning.” (218)
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Monstrosity--4 It is an “imaginary being who comes to life in language and, once having done so, cannot be eliminated from language.” (218)
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Questions: Are monsters specifically gendered, raced or classed in Frankenstein? In cinematic depictions of the Frankenstein myth, are monsters raced, gendered or classed?
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Evolving Replies According to Brooks
A monster is a woman seeking to escape the feminine condition into recognition by the fraternity. (218) A monster eludes gender definition. (219)
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Question: How is the monstrous body represented in comedic horror versions like Young Frankenstein and The Rocky Horror Picture Show?
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Concluding Remarks: “In Frankenstein, language is marked by the body, by the process of embodiment. We have not so much a mark on the body as the mark of the body: the capacity of language to create a body, one that in turn calls into question the language that we use to classify and control bodies.” (220) Question: What implications re. bodily categorization follow from these remarks?
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