Women's Classic Literature Enthusiasts discussion

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Frankenstein
Frankenstein
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Discussion 1: Preface -Chapter 13
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☯Emily , The First
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Apr 01, 2016 06:07PM

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I have a link to a brief history of Mary Shelley who wrote Frankenstein, which was published 198 years ago: http://www.biography.com/people/mary-...
Mary Shelley was the daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft who wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. This might be a good book to read in the future. Mary Wollstonecraft died soon after giving birth to Mary. Wollstonecraft was a proficient writer, publishing novels, treatises, a travel narrative, a history of the French Revolution, and a children's book. You can obtain more information on her here: http://www.biography.com/people/mary-...
Mary Shelley's father was William Godwin, who was the founder of philosophical anarchism. You can learn more about him and his beliefs here: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/god...
Last, but not least, Mary eventually married Percy Shelley. I say eventually, because Mary ran away with Shelley while he was still married to his first wife. Her father was not happy with their actions. However, Shelley's wife committed suicide in 1816, which enabled Percy and Mary to marry later that year. For more about Percy Shelley, read: http://www.biography.com/people/percy...
This link leads to a discussion of the social, historical and literary context of Frankenstein: https://www.heckgrammar.co.uk/index.p....
Now we can read the book!
Now we can read the book!

I've already read it so I won't be rereading it but I will join in on the discussion. I didn't care for it too much so it will be interesting to see if someone gives me insights that make me appreciate it more!

Appearances (esthetic notions of beauty, ugliness) as the basis for rejection, alienation, exclusion, discrimination; Victor's basic 'character flaw'--ambition, lust for power, fame, desire to be a benefactor of mankind---; a Master-Potter-Pot relationship, i.e. a flawed pot is smashed by its creator; a creator as 'parent' to his creation--did Victor "miss" seeing that?; this story's possible connection with the "mad scientist" stereotype in English; the "monster" as the ultimate "latch-key child"; how hubris figures in this story; the significance of the 3 books* which formed the creature's formal education; the degree to which Victor's enthralled reading of Paracelsus, Cornelius Agrippa, and Albertus Magnus shaped him; why the influence of the professors (esp. Krempe and Waldman) did not dissuade Victor from the project; and lastly, what to make of Hollywood's changing of the story to give Victor a helper who brought his "master" a "criminal" brain to replace the normal brain he had dropped when attempting to steal a brain for Frankenstein.
*The Sufferings of Young Werther, Plutarch's Lives, and Paradise Lost.
Would this story have helped contribute/form the mad scientist stereotype that writers like Nathaniel Hawthorne later used?
Does Hollywood's change make Victor more sympathetic and perhaps absolve him of responsibility? I haven't seen any of the movies so I'm just guessing, my thoughts on your thoughts.
Does Hollywood's change make Victor more sympathetic and perhaps absolve him of responsibility? I haven't seen any of the movies so I'm just guessing, my thoughts on your thoughts.

Shelley's prose is very "romantic" in this old German sense and is taking a bit of getting used to for me. It often seems over-the-top, so to speak, and I struggle a bit to take it seriously. I am finding the mountain scenes more evocative.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Magic Mountain (other topics)A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (other topics)