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MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN HISTORICAL AND LITERARY CONTEXT Prepared by Melissa Dyer Source Material from Holt, Rinehart, & Winston Glencoe and Signet Classics

MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

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Page 1: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN

HISTORICAL

AND

LITERARY

CONTEXT

Prepared by Melissa Dyer

Source Material from Holt, Rinehart, & Winston

Glencoe and Signet Classics

Page 2: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

HISTORICAL CONTEXT:SETTING

• Ambiguous time period of the novel’s setting

• Walton’s letters are dated merely “17--”

• No explicit references to current events

• Scholars assume novel is set in the latter part of 18th century

• end of Enlightenment & beginning of Romantic period

• story critiques excesses of former & introduces beliefs of latter

• novel is a great Gothic thriller

• Reflects a shift in social and political thought:

• from humans as creatures who use reason and science (to shape and

control their destiny)

• to humans as creatures who rely on their emotions (to determine

what is right)

Page 3: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

HISTORICAL CONTEXT:ENLIGHTENMENT PERIOD

• Enlightenment Period, early 18th century

• Enlightenment thinkers welcomed discoveries from sciences of

astronomy & physics

• Discoveries accepted as support for traditional beliefs about God’s

universe & seemed indisputable

• As more specific discoveries were made & more control was exerted

over Nature, however, a secular view of the world began to emerge

• humans were but one animal among many others

• humans were superior because of their ability to control so much of the

natural world

• this new thinking created a crisis --- Nature was no longer a great mystery

• This led some people to worry that nature itself was being threatened

by scientific advances & rational thought

Page 4: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

HISTORICAL CONTEXT:FRENCH REVOLUTION

• French Revolution helped bring end to Enlightenment

movement

• At the heart of French Revolution:

• a call for individual freedom

• the overthrow of rigid social hierarchy (that characterized both

British & French society)

• In Britian, social system further challenged by Industrial

Revolution

• change from agrarian to industrial society

• large, impoverished, and increasingly restless working class &

anxious middle class

Page 5: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

HISTORICAL CONTEXT:PHILOSOPHICAL & EDUCATIONAL

THEORIES

• John Locke’s Essay Concerning Human Understanding

(1690) argued that a child is a “blank slate” who is

formed only through experience

• Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Emile, or On Education (1762)

promoted the idea that a child’s upbringing is responsible

for his education

Page 6: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

HISTORICAL CONTEXT:WRITERS FOR CHANGE

• British writers (such as John Keats, Lord Byron, and Percy Bysshe

Shelley)

• Championed the rise of individuality & the individual’s

“imagination” and “poetical faculty” & the expression of emotion

over rational thought

• Argued for a delight in the mystery of nature

• Subjects included outcasts, solitary individuals, & ordinary people.

• Themes addressed relationship of individual to nature & society

Page 7: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

LITERARY CONTEXT:ROMANTICISM

• Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th

century

• spread to England, France, Italy, & the United States

• Word “romantic” was derived from the term romance

• popular genre of medieval literature

• plot centers on a hero who battles an evil enemy & wins

• hero undertakes quest—with a test or an ordeal to ascertain his

heroic qualities

• other features include supernatural elements, struggle between

good & evil, female figures (usually maidens) in need of rescue.

Page 8: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

LITERARY CONTEXT:ROMANTICISM

• 19th century British Romantic writers explored psychological & mysterious aspects of human experience

• Features of Romanticism:

• focus on Imagination & Naturalness—turning away from Reason &

Artifice rejecting formal, witty works

• emphasis on Individual (Personal) Passion (Feeling, Experiences,

Emotion)

• fascination with Nature & perception of it as a Healing Force

• belief in Individual Liberty & a rebellious attitude against tyranny

• promotes advocacy of Free Thought

Page 9: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

LITERARY CONTEXT:ROMANTICISM

• Features of Romanticism, continued

• belief in the innate goodness of mankind

• emphasis on Inspiration & Imagination

• use of symbolism

• use of supernatural

• belief that artistic creations are justified by their coherence &

intensity

• turn to a past or an inner dream world that is felt to be more

picturesque & magical than the industrial age

Page 10: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

LITERARY CONTEXT:GOTHIC LITERATURE

• Genre of Romantic writing

• Encouraged readers to reflect on:

• wild, unpredictable, powerfully destructive aspects of nature

• human aspirations & failures

• Brooding atmosphere that emphasizes “the unknown” & inspires fear

• Melancholy, desolate setting (wild, remote, decayed)

• Could enhance spiritual awareness

• Could generate “sensibility”—the ability to be emotionally

affected

Page 11: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

LITERARY CONTEXT: GOTHIC NOVELS

• Main ingredients: mystery, horror, & the supernatural

• Emphasized:

• the eerie (the supernatural), evoking terror & horror

• use of intense emotion

• Nature as a powerful & destructive force

• Use of weather & atmosphere to depict mood

• Achieved great popularity in Britain at a time when social

upheaval of Industrial Revolution & shock waves of

French Revolution left many people searching for an

understanding of new social & political ideas

Page 12: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

LITERARY CONTEXT:SCIENCE-FICTION GENRE

• Genre of writing that deals with the impact of science upon society

or individuals

• Generally considered to have begun toward the end of the 19th

century with works by Jules Verne and H. G. Wells

• Many consider Frankenstein to be a pre-cursor of the genre

• Sci-Fi has had major influence on films & tv, with the use of

computer-generated special effects

• PLAUSIBILITY is a key factor – the science fiction work must be

believable

Page 13: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

HISTORICAL CONTEXT:BODY SNATCHING

• During the 18th and early 19th centuries, criminals stole

corpses from newly dug graves to sell to medical schools,

which needed bodies for use in teaching anatomy.

• William Burke and William Hare were two infamous body snatchers of the day. They ran a boardinghouse in

Scotland, killed at least 15 of their lodgers, and sold the

bodies to a local surgeon who operated a school of

anatomy.

Page 14: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

HISTORICAL CONTEXT:LIFE FROM DEATH

• Mary Shelley’s idea of reanimating a corpse, was a proposition

that has some scientific credibility in the early 1800s. In her

introduction to the 3rd edition, she wrote about her idea

originating from listening to a discussion between her husband

& Lord Byron about current scientific events.

• In the years 1816-18, articles on such topics as electricity and

magnetism, vivisections, Polar explorations, & the emerging

theory of evolution were published.

Page 15: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

SYMBOLISM IN FRANKENSTEIN

• Color WHITE or a Brilliant Light symbolizes knowledge, accompanied

by pain, loneliness, & death

• The ALPS (particularly Mont Blanc) symbolizes “the sublime,” the

majestic aspect of nature that inspires awe & terror

• WATER symbolizes knowledge, communication, tranquility, &

immortal life; water becomes a symbol for Danger when it becomes

ICE

• LIGHTNING symbol for nature’s great elusive power

• ELECTRICITY (both beneficial & destructive consequences) replaces

Promethean FIRE as a “gift”

• NATURE symbolizes tranquility & inspiration

Page 16: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

CHARACTER ARCHETYPESIN FRANKENSTEIN

• Noble Savage

• Doppelgangers (Self & Shadow)

• Hero

• Wanderer

• Orphan

• Parent (Mother or Father) & Child

• Mad Scientist

• Monster/Creature of Nightmare

• Outcast

• Scapegoat

Page 17: MARY W. SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN · 2019-07-10 · LITERARY CONTEXT: ROMANTICISM •Romanticism began in Germany, around the turn of the 19th century •spread to England, France,

OTHER LITERARY ELEMENTS

• IRONY: The Creature is a much more sympathetic character

than Dr. Frankenstein

• ANTITHESIS: Contrasts between Frankenstein & the Creature as

well as between passion/reason, natural/unnatural, known/

unknown, civilized/uncivilized, masculine/feminine, life/death

beautiful/ugly, good/bad, light/dark, heat/cold

• ALLUSION:

• Paradise Lost by John Milton

• The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

• Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey by William

Wordsworth