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{{short description|1818 novel by Mary Shelley}} | |||
:''This article is about the 1818 novel. For the monster itself see ]. For movies, comics and other derivative works see ]. | |||
{{about|the novel by Mary Shelley}}{{more sources|date=December 2024}} | |||
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{{Infobox Book | <!-- See Misplaced Pages:WikiProject_Novels or Misplaced Pages:WikiProject_Books --> | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2024}} | |||
| name = Frankenstein | |||
{{Use British English|date=June 2020}} | |||
| image =] | |||
{{Infobox book <!-- See Misplaced Pages:WikiProject_Novels or Misplaced Pages:WikiProject_Books --> | |||
| image_caption =Book covers for ''Frankenstein'' have taken many forms over the years which emphasize different themes of the novel such as gothic horror, science fiction, and romanticism. In this example, an historical anatomical painting of the human arm by ] (1537-1619) examines the themes of romanticism, science and art. | |||
| |
| name = Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus | ||
| image = Frankenstein 1818 edition title page.jpg | |||
| illustrator = | |||
| caption = Volume I, first edition | |||
| cover_artist = | |||
| |
| author = ] | ||
| |
| country = England | ||
| |
| language = English | ||
| genre = ], ], science fiction<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Stableford |first=Brian |editor-last=Seed |editor-first=David |encyclopedia=Anticipations: Essays on Early Science Fiction and its Precursors |title=Frankenstein and the Origins of Science Fiction |url=https://archive.org/details/anticipationsess00unse/page/47 |access-date=19 July 2018|year=1995 |publisher=Syracuse University Press |isbn=978-0815626404 |pages= }}</ref> | |||
| publisher = Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones | |||
| published = {{Start date and age|1818|01|01|df=yes}} | |||
| release_date = ] ] | |||
| publisher = Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones | |||
| media_type = Print (] & ]) | |||
| pages = | | pages = 280 | ||
| set_in = England, Ireland, Italy, France, Scotland, ], ], ]; late 18th century | |||
| isbn = NA | |||
| isbn = <!-- N/A; ISBNs were not in use till 1966 --> | |||
| dewey = 823.7 | |||
| preceded_by = ] | |||
| followed_by = ] | |||
| congress = PR5397 .F7 | |||
| wikisource = Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus''''' is an 1818 ] written by English author ]. ''Frankenstein'' tells the story of ], a young scientist who creates a ] ] in an unorthodox scientific experiment. Shelley started writing the story when she was 18, and the first edition was published anonymously in London on 1 January 1818, when she was 20. Her name first appeared in the second edition, which was published in Paris in 1821. | |||
'''''Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus''''' is a ] by ]. First published in ] in 1818 (but more often read in the revised third edition of 1831), it is a novel infused with some elements of the ] and the ] movement. It was also a warning against the "over-reaching" of modern man and the ]. (The novel's subtitle, ''The Modern ]'', alludes to the over-reaching and punishment of the character from ].) The story has had an influence across ] and ] and spawned a complete genre of ] stories and ]s. Many distinguished authors, such as ], claim that it is the very first ] novel. | |||
Shelley travelled through Europe in 1815, moving along the river ] in Germany, and stopping in ], {{convert|17|km}} away from ], where, about a century earlier, ], an ], had engaged in experiments.<ref>Hobbler, Dorthy and Thomas. ''The Monsters: Mary Shelley and the Curse of Frankenstein''. Back Bay Books; 20 August 2007.</ref><ref>Garrett, Martin. ''Mary Shelley''. Oxford University Press, 2002</ref><ref>Seymour, Miranda. ''Mary Shelley''. Atlanta, GA: Grove Press, 2002. pp. 110–11</ref> She then journeyed to the region of ], Switzerland, where much of the story takes place. ] and ] ideas were topics of conversation for her companions, particularly for her lover and future husband ]. | |||
==Plot summary== | |||
{{spoiler}} | |||
{{cquote|It was on a dreary night of November, that I beheld the accomplishment of my toils. With an anxiety that almost amounted to agony, I collected the instruments of life around me, that I might infuse a spark of being into the lifeless thing that lay at my feet. It was already one in the morning; the rain pattered dismally against the panes, and my candle was nearly burnt out, when, by the glimmer of the half-extinguished light, I saw the dull yellow eye of the creature open; it breathed hard, and a convulsive motion agitated its limbs.}} | |||
In 1816, Mary, Percy, ], and ] had a competition to see who would write the best horror story.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.biography.com/news/mary-shelley-frankenstein-i-frankenstein-movie|title=Her 'Midnight Pillow': Mary Shelley and the Creation of Frankenstein|last= McGasko|first= Joe|website=Biography|access-date=2019-02-18|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190219072925/https://www.biography.com/news/mary-shelley-frankenstein-i-frankenstein-movie|archive-date=19 February 2019|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The novel opens with Captain Walton on a ship sailing north of the ]. Walton's ship becomes ice-bound, and as he contemplates his isolation and paralysis, he spots a figure traveling across the ice on a dog sled. This is ]'s ]. Soon after he sees the ill Victor Frankenstein himself, and invites him onto his boat. The narrative of Walton is a ] that allows for the story of Victor to be related. At the same time, Walton's predicament is symbolically appropriate for Victor's tale of displaced passion and brutalism. | |||
After thinking for days, Shelley was inspired to write ''Frankenstein'' after imagining a scientist who created life and was horrified by what he had made.<ref name="introduction 11-13">{{Cite web|first=Mary W. |last=Shelley |title=Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus|url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/42324/42324-h/42324-h.htm|access-date=2022-12-29|via=Project Gutenberg |at=Paragraphs 11-13}}</ref> | |||
''Frankenstein'' is one of the best-known works of ]. Infused with elements of the ] and the ] movement, it has had a considerable influence on literature and on popular culture, spawning a complete genre of horror stories, films, and plays. Since the publication of the novel, the name "Frankenstein" has often been used to ].<ref>Bergen Evans, ''Comfortable Words'', New York: Random House, 1957</ref><ref>Bryan Garner, ''A Dictionary of Modern American Usage'', New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. | |||
Victor takes over telling the story at this point. Curious and intelligent from a young age, he learns from the works of the masters of ] ], reading such authors as ], ] and ] and shunning modern ] teachings of natural science (see also ]). He leaves his beloved family in ], ] to study in ], ], ], where he is first introduced to modern science. In a moment of inspiration, combining his new-found knowledge of natural science with the alchemic ideas of his old masters, Victor perceives the means by which inanimate matter can be imbued with life. He sets about constructing a man—perhaps intended as a companion—using means that Shelley refers to only vaguely. The main idea seems to be that Victor built a complete body from various organic parts, then simulated the functions of the human system in it. In the novel it is stated (chapter 4, volume 1) that he uses bones from ]s (repositories for the bones or bodies of the dead), and | |||
</ref><ref> | |||
''The dissecting room and the slaughterhouse furnished many of my materials; and often did my human nature turn with loathing from my occupation, whilst, still urged on by an eagerness which perpetually increased, I brought my work near to a conclusion.'' | |||
''Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of American English'', Merriam-Webster: 2002. | |||
However, this is at odds with him creating a similar Monster later in the novel on an island that would not have a large enough selection of corpses. An alternate theory is that the bones in the charnel houses' were used to understand human anatomy, and the body was made from base chemicals.Subsequent visual interpretations of the story have included the creation of Frankenstein's monster through alchemy, by the piecing together of corpses, or a combination of the two. ], the body is often given the "spark of life" in the form of a channeled lightning bolt, conducted from a ] during a stormy night. | |||
</ref> | |||
==Summary== | |||
He intends the creature to be beautiful, but when it awakens he is disgusted. It has yellow, watery eyes, translucent skin, and is of an abominable size. Victor finds this revolting and runs out of the room in terror. That night he wakes up with the creature at his bedside facing him with an outstretched arm, and flees again, whereupon the creature disappears. Shock and overwork cause Victor to take ill for several months. After recovering, in about a year's time, he receives a letter from home informing him of the murder of his youngest brother William. He departs for Switzerland at once. | |||
===Background=== | |||
''Frankenstein'' is a ] written in ]. Set in the 18th century, it documents a fictional correspondence between Captain Robert Walton and his sister, Margaret Walton Saville. | |||
===Captain Walton introductory narrative=== | |||
Near Geneva, Victor catches a glimpse of the creature in a thunderstorm among the rocky boulders of the mountains, and is convinced that it killed William. Upon arriving home he finds Justine, the family's beloved maid, framed for the murder. To Victor's surprise, Justine makes a false confession because her minister threatens her with excommunication. Despite Victor's feelings of overwhelming guilt, he does not tell anyone about his horrid creation and Justine is convicted and executed. To recover from the ordeal, Victor goes hiking into the mountains where he encounters his "cursed creation" again, this time on the Mer de Glace, a ] above Chamonix. | |||
Captain Walton is a failed writer who sets out to explore the North Pole in hopes of expanding scientific knowledge. After departing from ], the ship is trapped by ] on the journey across the ]. During this time, the crew spots a ] driven by a gigantic figure. A few hours later, the ice splits apart, freeing the ship, and the crew rescues a nearly frozen and emaciated man named ] from a drifting ]. Victor has been in pursuit of the gigantic man observed by Walton's crew. Victor starts to recover from his exertion; he sees in Walton the same obsession that has destroyed him and recounts a story of his life's miseries to Walton as a warning. | |||
===Victor Frankenstein's narrative=== | |||
The creature converses with Victor and tells him his story, speaking in strikingly eloquent and detailed language. He describes his feelings first of confusion, then rejection and ]. He explains how he learned to talk by studying a poor ] family through a chink in the wall. He performs in secret many kind deeds for this family, but in the end, they drive him away when they see his appearance. He gets the same response from any human who sees him. The creature confesses that it was indeed he who killed William and framed Justine, and that he did so out of ]. But now, the creature only wants one thing; companionship. He begs Victor to create a synthetic woman (counterpart to the synthetic man), with whom the creature can live, sequestered from all humanity but happy with his mate. | |||
Born in ], ], into a wealthy ]n family, Victor and his younger brothers, Ernest and William, are sons of Alphonse Frankenstein and the former Caroline Beaufort. From a young age, Victor has a strong desire to understand the world. He is obsessed with studying theories of ], though when he is older he realizes that such theories are considerably outdated. When Victor is five years old, his parents adopt ] (the orphaned daughter of an expropriated Italian nobleman) whom Victor calls 'cousin'. Victor's parents later take in another child, Justine Moritz, who becomes William's nanny. | |||
Weeks before he leaves for the ] in Germany, his mother dies of ]; Victor buries himself in his experiments to deal with the grief. At the university, he excels at ] and other sciences, soon developing a secret technique to impart life to non-living matter. He undertakes the creation of a humanoid, but due to the difficulty in replicating the minute parts of the human body, Victor makes ] tall, about {{convert|8|ft}} in height, and proportionally large. Victor works at gathering the vital organs by pilfering ]s, ] and by entrapping and ] feral animals. Despite Victor selecting its features to be beautiful, upon animation the Creature is instead hideous, with dull and watery yellow eyes and yellow skin that barely conceals the muscles and blood vessels underneath. Repulsed by his work, Victor flees. While wandering the streets the next day, he meets his childhood friend, Henry Clerval, and takes Henry back to his apartment, fearful of Henry's reaction if he sees the monster. However, when Victor returns to his laboratory, the Creature is gone. | |||
At first, Victor agrees, but later, he tears up the half-made companion in disgust and madness. In retribution, the creature kills Clerval, Victor's best friend, and later, on Victor's wedding night, his wife Elizabeth. Victor now becomes the hunter: he pursues the creature into the Arctic ice, though in vain. Near exhaustion, he is stranded when an iceberg breaks away, carrying him out into the ocean. Before death takes him, Captain Walton's ship arrives and he is rescued. | |||
Victor falls ill from the experience and is nursed back to health by Henry. After recovering he forgets about the Creature and goes into Henry's study of Oriental languages, which he considers the happiest time of his academic career. This is cut short when Victor receives a letter from his father notifying him of the murder of his brother William. Near Geneva, Victor sees a large figure and becomes convinced that his creation is responsible. Justine Moritz, William's nanny, is convicted of the crime after William's locket, which contained a miniature portrait of Caroline, is found in her pocket. Victor knows that no one will believe him if he testifies that it was the doing of the Creature; Justine is executed. Ravaged by grief and guilt, Victor takes up ] in the ]. While hiking through ]'s ], he is suddenly approached by the Creature, who insists that Victor hear his tale. | |||
Walton assumes the narration again, describing a temporary recovery in Victor's health, allowing him to relate his extraordinary story. However, Victor's health soon fails, and he dies. Unable to convince his shipmates to continue north and bereft of the charismatic Frankenstein, Walton is forced to turn back towards ] under the threat of ]. Finally, the creature boards the ship and finds Victor dead, and greatly laments what he has done to his maker. He vows to commit ]. He leaves the ship by leaping through the cabin window onto the ice, and is never seen again. | |||
=== The Creature's narrative === | |||
==Genesis== | |||
Intelligent and articulate, the Creature relates his first days of life, living alone in the wilderness. He found that people were afraid of him and hated him due to his appearance, which led him to fear and hide from them. While living in an abandoned structure connected to a cottage, he grew fond of the poor family living there and discreetly collected firewood for them, cleared snow away from their path, and performed other tasks to help them. Secretly living next to the cottage for months, the Creature learned that the son was going to marry a Turkish woman whom he was teaching his native language, which the Creature listened in on the lessons and taught himself to speak and write. The Creature also taught himself to read after discovering a lost satchel of books in the woods. When he saw his reflection in a pool, he realized his appearance was hideous, and it horrified him as much as it horrified normal humans. As he continued to learn of the family's plight, he grew increasingly attached to them, and eventually he approached the family in hopes of becoming their friend, entering the house while only the blind father, De Lacey, was present. The two conversed, but on the return of the others, the rest of them were frightened. De Lacey's son Felix attacked him, and the Creature fled the house. The next day, the family left their home out of fear that he would return. Witnessing this, the monster renounced any hope of being accepted by humanity, and vowed to get his revenge. Although he hated his creator for abandoning him, he decided to travel to ] to find him because he believed that Victor was the only person with a responsibility to help him. On the journey, he rescued a girl who had fallen into a river, but her father, believing that the Creature intended to harm them, shot him in the shoulder. The Creature then swore revenge against all humans. He travelled to Geneva using details from a combination of Victor's journal and geography lessons gleaned from the family. When in Switzerland he chanced upon William, who was at first frightened, and the Creature held his wrist to calm him. When William screamed and threatened punishment from his father, "M. Frankenstein", this sparked the creature into crushing William's throat to spite Victor. The Creature then took William's locket and later placed it into the dress of Justine, incriminating her as the murderer. | |||
{{cquote|How I, then a young girl, came to think of, and to dilate upon, so very hideous an idea?}} | |||
During the snowy summer of 1816, the "]," the world was locked in a long cold ] caused by the eruption of ] in 1815. In this terrible year, the then ], age 19, and her husband-to-be ], visited ] at the Villa Diodati by ] in ]. The weather was consistently too cold and dreary that summer to enjoy the outdoor vacation activities they had planned, so after reading '']'', an anthology of German ghost stories, Byron challenged the Shelleys and his personal physician ] to each compose a story of their own, the contest being won by whoever wrote the scariest tale. Mary conceived an idea after she fell into a ] or nightmare during which she saw "the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together." This was the germ of ''Frankenstein''. Byron managed to write just a fragment based on the ] legends he heard while travelling the ], and from this Polidori created '']'' (1819), the progenitor of the romantic vampire literary ]. Thus, the Frankenstein and vampire themes were created from that single circumstance. | |||
The Creature demands that Victor create a female companion like himself, arguing that as a living being, he has a right to happiness. The Creature promises that he and his mate will vanish into the ]n wilderness, never to reappear, if Victor grants his request. Should Victor refuse, the Creature threatens to kill Victor's remaining friends and loved ones and not stop until he completely ruins him. Fearing for his family, Victor reluctantly agrees. The Creature says he will watch over Victor's progress. | |||
==Publication== | |||
Mary Shelley completed her writing in May 1817, and ''Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus'' was first published on ] ] by the small ] ] of Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones. It was issued anonymously, with a preface written for Mary by ] and with a dedication to philosopher ], her father. It was published in an edition of just 500 copies in three volumes, the standard "triple-decker" format for 19th century first editions. The novel had been previously rejected by Percy Bysshe Shelley's publisher Charles Ollier and by Byron's publisher ]. | |||
=== Victor Frankenstein's narrative resumes === | |||
Critical reception of the book was mostly unfavourable, compounded by confused speculation as to the identity of the author, which was not well disguised. ] wrote that "Upon the whole, the work impresses us with a high idea of the author's original genius and happy power of expression", but most reviewers thought it "a tissue of horrible and disgusting absurdity" (''Quarterly Review''). | |||
Henry accompanies Victor to England, but they separate, at Victor's insistence, at ], in Scotland. Travelling to ] to build the second creature, Victor suspects that the Creature is following him. As he works on the new creature, he is plagued by premonitions of disaster. He fears that the female will hate the Creature - or worse still - be even more evil than he is. Even more worrying to him is the idea that creating the second creature might lead to the creation of ] just as strong as the monster who could plague humanity. He tears apart the unfinished female creature after he sees the Creature watching through a window and smiling. The Creature immediately bursts through the door to confront Victor and demands he repair his destruction and resume work, but Victor refuses. The Creature leaves, but gives a final threat: "I will be with you on your wedding night." Victor interprets this as a threat upon his life, believing that the Creature will kill him after he finally becomes happy. | |||
Victor sails out to sea to dispose of his instruments, and falls asleep in the boat. He awakens some time later, unable to return to shore due to a change in the wind, and falls unconscious, drifting to Ireland. When Victor awakens, he is arrested for murder. Victor is acquitted when ] confirms that he was in Orkney at the time the murder took place. However, when shown the murder victim, Victor is horrified to see it was Henry, whom the Creature has strangled. Victor suffers another mental breakdown and after recovering, he returns home with his father, who has restored to Elizabeth some of her father's fortune. His father does not know of the cause behind the murders of William and Henry, but senses a curse and begs Victor to honour his mother's last wish that Victor marry Elizabeth. | |||
Despite the reviews, ''Frankenstein'' achieved an almost immediate popular success. It became widely known especially through melodramatic theatrical adaptations – Mary Shelley saw a production of ''Presumption; or The Fate of Frankenstein'', a play by Richard Brinsley Peake, in 1823. A French translation appeared as early as 1821 (''Frankenstein: ou le Prométhée Moderne'', translated by Jules Saladin). | |||
In Geneva, Victor is about to marry Elizabeth and prepares to fight the Creature to the death, arming himself with pistols and a dagger. The night following their wedding, Victor asks Elizabeth to stay in her room while he looks for "the fiend". While Victor searches the house and grounds, the Creature strangles a screaming Elizabeth to death. From the window, Victor sees the Creature, who tauntingly points at Elizabeth's corpse; Victor tries to shoot him, but the Creature escapes. Victor's father Alphonse, weakened by age and by the death of Elizabeth, dies a few days later. Seeking revenge, Victor pursues the Creature across Europe and Russia, though his adversary stays one step ahead of him at all times. Eventually, the chase leads to the Arctic Ocean and then on towards the North Pole, and Victor reaches a point where he is within a mile of the Creature, but he collapses from exhaustion and ]. Eventually the ice around Victor's sledge breaks apart, and the resultant ] comes within range of Walton's ship. | |||
The second edition of ''Frankenstein'' was published on ] ] in two volumes (by G. and W. B. Whittaker), and this time credited Mary Shelley as the author. | |||
===Captain Walton's conclusion=== | |||
On ] ], the first "popular" edition in one volume appeared, published by Henry Colburn & Richard Bentley. This edition was quite heavily revised by Mary Shelley, and included a new, longer preface by her, presenting a somewhat embellished version of the genesis of the story. This edition tends to be the one most widely read now, although editions containing the original 1818 text are still being published. In fact, many scholars prefer the 1818 edition. They argue that it preserves the spirit of Shelley's original publication (see Anne K. Mellor's "Choosing a Text of Frankenstein to Teach" in the ] Critical edition). | |||
A few days after the Creature's vanishing, the ship is trapped by pack ice for a second time, and several crewmen die in the cold before the rest of Walton's crew insists on returning south once it is freed. Upon hearing the crew's demands, Victor is angered and, despite his condition, gives a powerful speech to them, reminding them that it is hardship and danger, not comfort, that defines a glorious undertaking such as theirs. However, although the speech makes an impression on the crew, it is not enough to change their minds. Knowing that continuing on would surely result in ], Walton agrees to abandon the voyage and return home, but Victor, despite his condition, declares that he will continue to hunt the Creature, adamant that he must be killed. | |||
Victor dies shortly thereafter, telling Walton, in his last words, to seek "happiness in tranquility and avoid ambition" but then refuting this, speculating that some other scientist might succeed where he has failed. Walton discovers the Creature on his ship, mourning over Victor's body. The Creature tells Walton that Victor's death has not brought him peace; rather, his crimes have made him even more miserable than Victor ever was. The Creature vows to burn himself on a ] so that no one else will ever know of his existence. Walton watches as the Creature drifts away on an ice raft, never to be seen again. | |||
The revised edition was changed in several significant ways: any indication that Frankenstein's monster was created by vice was removed, and the text details a benevolent creator who creates the monster merely for the purposes of science. Suggestions of an incestuous relationship between Victor and Elizabeth are also removed, by making Elizabeth an adopted child of the Frankensteins. | |||
== Author's background == | |||
==Name origins== | |||
]'' by ] (1840–41)]] | |||
===The creature=== | |||
{{main|Frankenstein's monster}} | |||
The creature – "my hideous progeny" – was not given a name by Mary Shelley, and is only referred to by words such as 'monster', 'creature', 'daemon', 'fiend', and 'wretch'. | |||
]'s mother, ], died from infection eleven days after giving birth to her. Shelley grew close to her father, ], having never known her mother. Godwin hired a nurse, who briefly cared for her and her half sister, before marrying his second wife ], who did not like the close bond between Shelley and her father. The resulting friction caused Godwin to favour his other children. | |||
After the release of ]'s popular 1931 film '']'', the filmgoing public immediately began speaking of the monster itself as "Frankenstein". A reference to this occurs in '']'' (1935) and in several subsequent films in the series, as well as in film titles such as ''].'' | |||
Shelley's father was a famous author of the time, and her education was of great importance to him, although it was not formal. Shelley grew up surrounded by her father's friends, writers, and persons of political importance, who often gathered at the family home. This inspired her authorship at an early age. Mary, at the age of sixteen, met Percy Bysshe Shelley (who later became her husband) while he was visiting her father. Godwin did not approve of the relationship between his daughter and an older, married man, so they fled to France along with her stepsister, ]. On 22 February 1815, Shelley gave birth prematurely to her first child, Clara, who died two weeks later.<ref name=":2">{{Cite news|url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/02/12/the-strange-and-twisted-life-of-frankenstein|title=The Strange and Twisted Life of "Frankenstein"|last=Lepore|first=Jill|magazine=The New Yorker|date=2018-02-05|access-date=2019-03-04|issn=0028-792X|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180222230948/https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/02/12/the-strange-and-twisted-life-of-frankenstein|archive-date=22 February 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Some justify referring to the Creature as "Frankenstein" by pointing out that the Creature is, so to speak, Victor Frankenstein's offspring. | |||
In the ], Mary, Percy, and Claire took a trip to visit Claire's lover, Lord Byron, in ]. Poor weather conditions, more akin to winter, forced Byron and the visitors to stay indoors. To help pass time, Byron suggested that he, Mary, Percy, and Byron's physician, ], have a competition to write the best ghost story to pass time stuck indoors.<ref>{{cite web |title=Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" is published |url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/frankenstein-published |website=History.com |access-date=11 February 2021}}</ref> Mary was just eighteen years old when she won the contest with her creation of ''Frankenstein''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/frankenstein/exhibition1.html|title=Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature: The Birth of Frankenstein|website=nlm.nih.gov|access-date=2018-11-20|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181129054357/https://www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/frankenstein/exhibition1.html|archive-date=29 November 2018|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Badalamenti|first=Anthony|date=Fall 2006|title=Why did Mary Shelley Write Frankenstein|jstor=27512949|journal=Journal of Religion and Health|volume=45|issue=3|pages=419–39|doi=10.1007/s10943-006-9030-0|s2cid=37615140 | issn = 0022-4197 }}</ref> | |||
===Frankenstein=== | |||
Mary Shelley always maintained that she derived the name "Frankenstein" from a dream-vision, yet despite these public claims of originality, the name and what it means has been a source of many speculations. Literally, in ], the name ''Frankenstein'' means ''stone of the ]''. Frankenstein is the former name of ], a city in ]. There is a town called Frankenstein<ref></ref> in the ] with Burg Frankenstein<ref></ref> (Frankenstein Castle) and Burg Frankenstein<ref></ref> near Darmstadt. Moreover Frankenstein is a common family name in Germany. | |||
== Literary influences == | |||
More recently, ], in his ''In Search of Frankenstein'', argued that Mary and Percy Shelley stayed at Castle Frankenstein on their way to Switzerland, near ] along the Rhine, where a notorious alchemist named ] had experimented with human bodies, but that Mary suppressed mentioning this visit, to maintain her public claim of originality. A recent literary essay<ref>This essay was included in the 2005 publication of '']''; the first full English translation of the book of 'ghost stories' that inspired the literary competition resulting in Mary's writing of Frankenstein.</ref> by ] supports Florescu's position that Mary Shelley knew of, and visited 'Burg Frankenstein' before writing her debut novel. Day includes details of an alleged description of the Frankenstein castle that exists in Shelley's 'lost' journals. Though this theory was not without critics in 2004; Frankenstein expert ] called it an "unconvincing....conspiracy theory"<ref>(Leonard Wolf, p.20)</ref>, the new information that Day presents in his essay 'Searching for the Muse' has yet to be examined in detail. | |||
Shelley's work was heavily influenced by that of her parents. Her father was famous for '']'' and her mother famous for '']''. Her father's novels also influenced her writing of ''Frankenstein''. These novels included '']'', ''St. Leon'', and ''Fleetwood''. All of these books were set in Switzerland, similar to the setting in ''Frankenstein''. Some major themes of social affections and the renewal of life that appear in Shelley's novel stem from these works she had in her possession. Other literary influences that appear in ''Frankenstein'' are ''] et Galatée'' by Mme de Genlis, and ], with the use of individuals identifying the problems with society.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://knarf.english.upenn.edu/Articles/pollin.html|title=Pollin, "Philosophical and Literary Sources"|website=knarf.english.upenn.edu|access-date=2019-05-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190405185454/http://knarf.english.upenn.edu/Articles/pollin.html|archive-date=5 April 2019|url-status=live}}</ref> Ovid also inspires the use of ] in Shelley's title.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Pollin|first=Burton|date=Spring 1965|title=Philosophical and Literary Sources of Frankenstein|journal=Comparative Literature|volume=17|issue=2|pages=97–108|doi=10.2307/1769997|jstor=1769997}}</ref> | |||
===Victor=== | |||
A possible interpretation of the name Victor derives from the poem '']'' by ], a great influence on Shelley (a quotation from ''Paradise Lost'' is on the opening page of ''Frankenstein'' and Shelley even allows the monster himself to read it). Milton frequently refers to God as "the Victor" in ''Paradise Lost'', and Shelley sees Victor as playing God by creating life. In addition, Shelley's portrayal of the monster owes much to the character of ] in ''Paradise Lost''; indeed, the monster says, after reading the epic poem, that he sympathizes with Satan's role in the story. | |||
The influence of ]'s '']'' and ]'s '']'' are evident in the novel. In ''The Frankenstein of the French Revolution'', author Julia Douthwaite posits that Shelley probably acquired some ideas for Frankenstein's character from ]'s book ''Elements of Chemical Philosophy'', in which he had written that, | |||
Victor was also a pen name of Percy Shelley's, as in the collection of poetry he wrote with his sister Elizabeth, ''Original Poetry by Victor and Cazire''.<ref></ref> There is speculation that one of Mary Shelley's models for Victor Frankenstein was Percy, who at Eton had "experimented with electricity and magnetism as well as with gunpowder and numerous chemical reactions," and whose rooms at Oxford were filled with scientific equipment.<ref></ref> | |||
<blockquote>science has ... bestowed upon man powers which may be called creative; which have enabled him to change and modify the beings around him ... </blockquote> | |||
References to the ] run through the novel; a likely source is {{ill|François-Félix Nogaret|fr}}'s ''Le Miroir des événemens actuels, ou la Belle au plus offrant'' (1790), a political parable about scientific progress featuring an inventor named Frankésteïn, who creates a life-sized automaton.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/F/bo13265096.html|title=The Frankenstein of 1790 and Other Lost Chapters from Revolutionary France|publisher=University of Chicago Press |chapter=The Frankenstein of the French Revolution |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121116230136/http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/F/bo13265096.html |archive-date=16 November 2012 |url-status=live |first=Julia V. |last=Douthwaite}}</ref> | |||
Both Frankenstein and the monster quote passages from Percy Shelley's 1816 poem, "]", and its theme of the role of the subconscious is discussed in prose. Percy Shelley's name never appeared as the author of the poem, although the novel credits other quoted poets by name. ]'s poem "]" (1798) is associated with the theme of guilt and ]'s "]" (1798) with that of innocence. | |||
==="Modern Prometheus"=== | |||
''The Modern Prometheus'' is the novel's subtitle (though some modern publishings of the work now drop the subtitle, mentioning it only in an introduction). ], in some versions of Greek mythology, was the ] who created mankind, and Victor's work by creating man by new means obviously reflects that creative work. Prometheus was also the bringer of fire who took fire from heaven and gave it to man. ] then punished Prometheus by fixing him to a rock where each day a predatory bird came to devour his liver. | |||
Many writers and historians have attempted to associate several then-popular natural philosophers (now called physical scientists) with Shelley's work because of several notable similarities. Two of the most noted natural philosophers among Shelley's contemporaries were ], who made many public attempts at human reanimation through bio-electric Galvanism in London,<ref name=":7">{{cite journal |last1=Ruston |first1=Sharon |title=The Science of Life and Death in Mary Shelley's ''Frankenstein'' |journal=] |date=25 November 2015 |url=http://publicdomainreview.org/2015/11/25/the-science-of-life-and-death-in-mary-shelleys-frankenstein/ |access-date=25 November 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151126072751/http://publicdomainreview.org/2015/11/25/the-science-of-life-and-death-in-mary-shelleys-frankenstein/ |archive-date=26 November 2015 |url-status=live }}</ref> and ], who was supposed to have developed chemical means to extend the life span of humans. While Shelley was aware of both of these men and their activities, she makes no mention of or reference to them or their experiments in any of her published or released notes. | |||
Prometheus was also a myth told in Latin but was a very different story. In this version Prometheus makes man from clay and water, again a very relevant theme to Frankenstein as Victor rebels against the laws of nature and as a result is punished by his creation. | |||
Ideas about life and death discussed by Percy and Byron were of great interest to scientists of that time. They discussed ideas from ] and the experiments of ] as well as ].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Lind, James (1736–1812) on JSTOR|url=https://plants.jstor.org/stable/10.5555/al.ap.person.bm000033179|access-date=2021-05-08|website=plants.jstor.org}}</ref> Mary joined these conversations and the ideas of Darwin, Galvani and perhaps Lind were present in her novel. | |||
Prometheus' relation to the novel can be interpreted in a number of ways. For Mary Shelley on a personal level, Prometheus was not a hero but a devil, whom she blamed for bringing fire to man and thereby seducing the human race to the vice of eating meat (fire brought cooking which brought hunting and killing)<ref>(Leonard Wolf, p. 20).</ref> For Romance era artists in general, Prometheus' gift to man compared with the two great utopian promises of the 18th century: the ] and the ], containing both great promise and potentially unknown horrors. | |||
Shelley's personal experiences also influenced the themes within ''Frankenstein''. The themes of loss, guilt, and the consequences of defying nature present in the novel all developed from Mary Shelley's own life. The loss of her mother, the relationship with her father, and the death of her first child are thought to have inspired the monster and his separation from parental guidance. In a 1965 issue of ''The Journal of Religion and Health'' a psychologist proposed that the theme of guilt stemmed from her not feeling good enough for Percy because of the loss of their child.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
Byron was particularly attached to the play '']'' by Aeschylus, and ] would soon write '']''. | |||
== |
==Composition== | ||
] | |||
''Frankenstein'' is in some ways ], and was conceived and written during an early phase of the ], at a time of dramatic change. The creation rebels against its creator: a clear message that irresponsible uses of ] can have unconsidered consequences. | |||
During the rainy summer of 1816, the "]", the world was locked in a long, cold ] caused by the eruption of ] in 1815.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Marshall|first=Alan|date=January 2020|title=Did a Volcanic Eruption in Indonesia Really Lead to the Creation of Frankenstein?|url=https://theconversation.com/did-a-volcanic-eruption-in-indonesia-really-lead-to-the-creation-of-frankenstein-130212|website=The Conversation}}</ref><ref>Sunstein, 118.</ref> Mary Shelley, aged 18, and her lover (and future husband), ], visited ] at the ] by ], in Switzerland's ]. The weather was too cold and dreary that summer to enjoy the outdoor holiday activities they had planned, so the group retired indoors until dawn. | |||
Sitting around a log fire at Byron's villa, the company amused themselves by reading German ghost stories translated into French from the book ''].''<ref>Dr. ], "The Vampyre" 1819, The New Monthly Magazine and Universal Register; London: H. Colburn, 1814–1820. Vol. 1, No. 63.</ref> Byron proposed that they "each write a ghost story."<ref>paragraph 7, Introduction, Frankenstein 1831 edition</ref> Unable to think of a story, Mary Shelley became anxious. She recalled being asked "Have you thought of a story?" each morning, and every time being "forced to reply with a mortifying negative."<ref>paragraph 8, Introduction, Frankenstein 1831 edition</ref> During one evening in the middle of summer, the discussions turned to the nature of the principle of life. "Perhaps a corpse would be re-animated," Mary noted, "] had given token of such things".<ref>paragraph 10, Introduction, Frankenstein 1831 edition</ref> It was after midnight before they retired and, unable to sleep, she became possessed by her imagination as she beheld the "grim terrors" of her "waking dream".<ref name="introduction 11-13"/> | |||
One interpretation was alluded to by Shelley herself, in her account of the radical politics of her father: | |||
{{Blockquote|I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together. I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion. Frightful must it be; for supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavour to mock the stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world.<ref>Quoted in Spark, 157, from Mary Shelley's introduction to the 1831 edition of ''Frankenstein''.</ref>}} | |||
{{cquote|The giant now awoke. The mind, never torpid, but never rouzed to its full energies, received the spark which lit it into an unextinguishable flame. Who can now tell the feelings of liberal men on the first outbreak of the ]. In but too short a time afterwards it became tarnished by the vices of ] -- dimmed by the want of talent of the ] -- deformed and blood-stained by the ].<ref>Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, "Life of ]," p. 151</ref>}} | |||
In September 2011, astronomer Donald Olson, after a visit to the Lake Geneva villa the previous year and inspecting data about the motion of the moon and stars, concluded that her "waking dream" took place between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m. on 16 June 1816, several days after the initial idea by Lord Byron that they each write a ghost story.<ref name="astro">{{Cite web|date=2011-09-25|first=Tim|last=Radford|title=Frankenstein's hour of creation identified by astronomers|url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/sep/26/frankenstein-hour-creation-identified-astronomers|access-date=2022-12-29|website=The Guardian|location=London |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170302174254/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/sep/26/frankenstein-hour-creation-identified-astronomers |archive-date=2 March 2017 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Another standard critique of the novel is as a journey of ] and the common fears of women in Shelley's day of frequent ] births and maternal deaths due to complications in delivery. Mary Shelley experienced the horrors of a stillborn birth the prior year. Victor Frankenstein is often fearful of the release of the Monster from his control, when it is free to act independently in the world and affect it for better or worse. Also, during much of the novel Victor fears the creature's desire to destroy him by killing everyone and everything most dear to him. However it must be noted that the creature was not born evil, but only wanted to be loved by its creator, by other humans, and to love a sentient creature like itself. It was mankind who taught it evil, Victor rejected it, and the creature's poor treatment by villagers taught it how to be evil. In this way the creature represents the natural fears of bringing a new innocent life into the world and raising it properly so that it does not become a monster. | |||
Mary Shelley began writing what she assumed would be a short story, but with Percy Shelley's encouragement, she expanded the tale into a fully-fledged novel.<ref>Bennett, ''An Introduction'', 30–31; Sunstein, 124.</ref> She later described that summer in Switzerland as the moment "when I first stepped out from childhood into life."<ref>Sunstein, 117.</ref> Shelley wrote the first four chapters in the weeks following the suicide of her half-sister Fanny.<ref>Hay, 103.</ref> This was one of many personal tragedies that impacted Shelley's work. Shelley's first child died in infancy, and when she began composing ''Frankenstein'' in 1816, she was probably nursing her second child, who was also dead by the time of ''Frankenstein''{{'}}s publication.<ref>{{Cite magazine|last=Lepore|first=Jill|date=5 February 2018|title=The Strange and Twisted Life of 'Frankenstein'|url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/02/12/the-strange-and-twisted-life-of-frankenstein|magazine=The New Yorker|access-date=22 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180222230948/https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/02/12/the-strange-and-twisted-life-of-frankenstein|archive-date=22 February 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> Shelley wrote much of the book while residing in a lodging house in the centre of ] in 1816.<ref>{{cite web|last=Kennedy|first=Mave|title='A 200-year-old secret': plaque to mark Bath's hidden role in Frankenstein|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/feb/26/a-200-year-old-secret-plaque-to-mark-baths-hidden-role-in-frankenstein|work=The Guardian|location=London|date=26 February 2018|access-date=13 November 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181114060614/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/feb/26/a-200-year-old-secret-plaque-to-mark-baths-hidden-role-in-frankenstein|archive-date=14 November 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Representing a minority opinion, Arthur Belefant in his 116-page book, ''Frankenstein, the Man and the Monster'' (1999, ISBN 0-9629555-8-2) contends that Mary Shelley's intent was for the reader to understand that the Creature never existed, and Victor Frankenstein committed the three murders. In this interpretation, the story is a study of the moral degradation of Victor, and the "science-fiction" aspects of the story are Victor's imagination. | |||
Byron managed to write just a fragment based on the ] legends he heard while travelling the ], and from this ] created '']'' (1819), the progenitor of the romantic vampire literary genre. Thus two seminal horror tales originated from the conclave.<ref name="BBC/b04nvq7q">{{cite web |title=Frankenstein and the Vampyre: A Dark and Stormy Night |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04nvq7q |website=] |publisher=] |access-date=28 December 2024}}</ref><ref name="era.org.uk/frankenstein-vampyre">{{cite web |title=Frankenstein and the Vampyre: A Dark and Stormy Night - BBC Literary Archive |url=https://era.org.uk/lit-resource/frankenstein-and-the-vampyre-a-dark-and-stormy-night/ |website=Educational Recording Agency Limited |access-date=28 December 2024 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="films/96431">{{cite web |title=Frankenstein and the Vampyre: A Dark and Stormy Night |url=https://www.films.com/id/96431 |website=Films Media Group |access-date=29 December 2024 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
] was a very popular topic in Shelley's world. In fact, it was becoming an acceptable idea that humanity could infuse the spark of life into a non-living thing (]'s experiments, for example). The scientific world just after the Industrial Revolution was delving into the unknown, and limitless possibilities also caused fear and apprehension for many as to the consequences of such horrific possibilities. | |||
The group talked about ] and ] ideas as well. Mary Shelley believed the Enlightenment idea that society could progress and grow if political leaders used their powers responsibly; however, she also believed the Romantic ideal that misused power could destroy society.<ref>Bennett, Betty T. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley: An Introduction, pp. 36–42. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.</ref> | |||
The book also discusses the ethics of creating life and contains innumerable ] allusions in this context. | |||
Shelley's manuscripts for the first three-volume edition in 1818 (written 1816–1817), as well as the ] for her publisher, are now housed in the ] in ]. The Bodleian acquired the papers in 2004, and they belong now to the ] Collection.<ref name=":1">{{cite web |url=http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/1500-1900/abinger/abinger.html |title=OX.ac.uk |publisher=Bodley.ox.ac.uk |date=15 December 2009 |access-date=28 August 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171205102149/http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/1500-1900/abinger/abinger.html |archive-date=5 December 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=http://shelleysghost.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/Frankenstein-notebook-reader#page/1/mode/2up|title=Shelley's Ghost – Reshaping the image of a literary family|website=shelleysghost.bodleian.ox.ac.uk|access-date=2019-09-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190810021645/http://shelleysghost.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/Frankenstein-notebook-reader#page/1/mode/2up|archive-date=10 August 2019|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2008, the Bodleian published a new edition of ''Frankenstein'', edited by Charles E. Robinson, that contains comparisons of Mary Shelley's original text with Percy Shelley's additions and interventions alongside.<ref>{{cite book|author=Mary Shelley, with Percy Shelley|editor=Charles E. Robinson|year=2008|title=The Original Frankenstein|url=http://www.bodleianshop.co.uk/the-original-frankenstein.html|location=Oxford|publisher=Bodleian Library|isbn=978-1-851-24396-9|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150925134955/http://www.bodleianshop.co.uk/the-original-frankenstein.html|archive-date=25 September 2015}}</ref> | |||
In the 1931 film "Frankenstein," ] plays the part of the Creature, and the scientist, played by ], is renamed Henry Frankenstein. Shelley's character Henry Clerval does not appear in the film at all, which eliminates Victor's foil altogether. However there is a character called Victor who is after Elizabeth, Frankenstein's fiancee. Changing the doctor's name from Victor also eliminates some original irony, inasmuch as the novel ends after exposing the doctor's utter failure and destruction. Since this film, the horror culture has confused modern audiences into replacing the scientist's name with his freakish creation. This event has stimulated much conversation in the literary criticism of Shelley's work. Attributing the name of the scientist to his creation reveals a deeper connection between the two, especially when the scientist realizes the great danger that the creation presents to himself and to the world. | |||
==Frankenstein |
==Frankenstein and the Monster== | ||
For Frankenstein in film, comics, games and other derivatives, see ]. | |||
===The Creature=== | |||
{{Main|Frankenstein's monster}} | |||
] as akin to Frankenstein's creature, in the wake of the ] in an 1882 issue of '']''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Frankenstein:Celluloid Monster|url=https://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/frankenstein/escaping.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160515180541/https://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/frankenstein/escaping.html |archive-date=15 May 2016 |url-status=dead |website=National Library of Medicine of the National Institute of Health}}</ref>]] | |||
Although the Creature was described in later works as a composite of whole body parts grafted together from cadavers and ] by the use of electricity, this description is not consistent with Shelley's work; both the use of electricity and the cobbled-together image of Frankenstein's monster were more the result of ]'s popular 1931 ] and other early motion-picture works based on the creature. In Shelley's original work, Victor Frankenstein discovers a previously unknown but elemental principle of life, and that insight allows him to develop a method to imbue vitality into inanimate matter, though the exact nature of the process is left ambiguous. After a great deal of hesitation in exercising this power, Frankenstein spends two years painstakingly constructing the Creature's body (one anatomical feature at a time, from raw materials supplied by "the dissecting room and the slaughter-house"), which he then brings to life using his unspecified process. | |||
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Part of Frankenstein's rejection of his creation is the fact that he does not give him a name. Instead, Frankenstein's creation is referred to by words such as "wretch", "monster", "creature", "demon", "devil", "fiend", and "it". When Frankenstein converses with the creature, he addresses him as "vile insect", "abhorred monster", "fiend", "wretched devil", and "abhorred devil". | |||
In the novel, the creature is compared to ],<ref name=":4">{{cite web |url=http://www.ala.org/ala/ppo/currentprograms/frankenstein/exhibittext.pdf |title=Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature / Exhibit Text |publisher=] and ALA Public Programs Office |url-status=dead |access-date=31 December 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061204162542/http://www.ala.org/ala/ppo/currentprograms/frankenstein/exhibittext.pdf |archive-date=4 December 2006 }} from the travelling exhibition {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071109215920/http://www.ala.org/ala/ppo/currentprograms/frankenstein/frankensteinpenetrating.cfm |date=9 November 2007 }}</ref> the ] in the ]. The monster also compares himself with the "fallen" angel. Speaking to Frankenstein, the monster says "I ought to be thy Adam, but I am rather the fallen angel". That angel would be ] (meaning "light-bringer") in Milton's '']'', which the monster has read. Adam is also referred to in the epigraph of the 1818 edition:<ref name="1818 edition">{{cite book |last1=Shelley |first1=Mary |title=Frankenstein |date=1818 |edition=1 |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/41445/41445-h/41445-h.htm}}</ref>{{blockquote| | |||
:Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay | |||
:To mould Me man? Did I solicit thee | |||
:From darkness to promote me?<ref>], '']'' (X. 743–45)</ref>}} | |||
Some have posited the creature as a composite of Percy Shelley and Thomas Paine. If the creature's hatred for Victor and his desire to raise a child mirror Percy's filial rebelliousness and his longing to adopt children, his desire to do good and his persecution can be said to echo Paine's utopian visions and fate in England.<ref>Chiu, Frances A. "Reform, Revolution, and the relevance of Frankenstein in 2020" in ''Frankenstein Reanimated: Conversations with Artists in Dystopian Times'', ed. by Marc Garrett and Yiannis Colakides. London: Torque, 2022, 33–44.</ref> | |||
The Creature has often been mistakenly called Frankenstein. In 1908, one author said "It is strange to note how well-nigh universally the term "Frankenstein" is misused, even by intelligent people, as describing some hideous monster."<ref>{{Cite book|last=Johnson|first=Rossiter|url=http://archive.org/details/authorsdigestwo10johngoog|title=Author's digest : the world's great stories in brief. Vol. 16, Robert Louis Stevenson to Albion Winegar Tourgée|date=1908|publisher=[New York] : Issued under the auspices of the Author's Press|others=unknown library}}</ref> ]'s '']'' (1916) describes an unruly child as an "infant Frankenstein".<ref>'']'', p. 96.</ref> ]'s "The Bridal Ornament", published in ''The Rover'', 12 June 1844, mentioned "the maker of poor Frankenstein". After the release of Whale's cinematic ''Frankenstein'', the public at large began speaking of the Creature itself as "Frankenstein". This misnomer continued with the successful sequel '']'' (1935), as well as in film titles such as '']''. | |||
] from the ] of the 1831 edition<ref>This illustration is reprinted in the frontispiece to the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151107023530/http://www.amazon.com/dp/098092104X |date=7 November 2015 }}</ref>]] | |||
===Origin of Victor Frankenstein's name=== | |||
Mary Shelley maintained that she derived the name ''Frankenstein'' from a dream-vision. This claim has since been disputed and debated by scholars that have suggested alternative sources for Shelley's inspiration.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Gray|first=Paul|date=1979-07-23|title=Books: The Man-Made Monster|magazine=Time|url=https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,947086-3,00.html|access-date=2020-09-21|issn=0040-781X}}</ref> The German name ''Frankenstein'' means "stone of the ]", and is associated with various places in Germany, including ] (''Burg Frankenstein'') in ], Hesse, and ] in ], a town in the ]. There is also a castle called Frankenstein in ], Thuringia, and a municipality called ] in Saxony. The town of ] in ] (now Ząbkowice, Poland) was the site of a ] in 1606, and this has been suggested as an inspiration to the author.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://historiamniejznanaizapomniana.wordpress.com/2016/01/24/afera-grabarzy-z-frankenstein/|title=Afera grabarzy z Frankenstein|first=Historia|last=zapomniana|date=24 January 2016|access-date=15 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180203135121/https://historiamniejznanaizapomniana.wordpress.com/2016/01/24/afera-grabarzy-z-frankenstein/|archive-date=3 February 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> Finally, the name is borne by the aristocratic ] from ]. | |||
] argued that Mary and Percy Shelley visited Frankenstein Castle near Darmstadt in 1814, where alchemist ] had experimented with human bodies, and reasoned that Mary suppressed mention of her visit to maintain her public claim of originality.<ref>{{Harvnb|Florescu|1996|pp=48–92}}.</ref> A literary essay by A.J. Day supports Florescu's position that Mary Shelley knew of and visited Frankenstein Castle before writing her debut novel.<ref name="Day2008">{{cite book|last=Day|first=A.J.|title=Fantasmagoriana (Tales of the Dead)|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=szyuBymktB4C&pg=PA150|year=2005|publisher=Fantasmagoriana Press|isbn=978-1-4116-5291-0|pages=149–51}}</ref> Day includes details of an alleged description of the Frankenstein castle in Mary Shelley's "lost journals". However, according to Jörg Heléne, Day's and Florescu's claims cannot be verified.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://darmundestat.wordpress.com/sonstiges/mary-shelleys-frankenstein-castle-frankenstein-and-the-alchemist-johann-conrad-dippel |title=Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Castle Frankenstein and the alchemist Johann Conrad Dippel |last=Heléne |first=Jörg |date=12 September 2016 |website=Darmstadt |access-date=2017-06-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161007001226/https://darmundestat.wordpress.com/sonstiges/mary-shelleys-frankenstein-castle-frankenstein-and-the-alchemist-johann-conrad-dippel/ |archive-date=7 October 2016 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
A possible interpretation of the name "Victor" is derived from '']'' by ], a great influence on Shelley (a quotation from ''Paradise Lost'' is on the opening page of ''Frankenstein'' and Shelley writes that the monster reads it in the novel).<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.english.upenn.edu/Projects/knarf/Articles/wade.html |title=Wade, Phillip. "Shelley and the Miltonic Element in Mary Shelley's ''Frankenstein''." ''Milton and the Romantics'', 2 (December, 1976), 23–25. |access-date=5 August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110414014829/http://www.english.upenn.edu/Projects/knarf/Articles/wade.html |archive-date=14 April 2011 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Jones|1952|pp=496–97}}.</ref> Milton frequently refers to God as "the victor" in ''Paradise Lost'', and Victor's creation of life in the novel is compared to God's creation of life in ''Paradise Lost''. In addition, Shelley's portrayal of the monster owes much to the character of ] in ''Paradise Lost''; and, the monster says in the story, after reading the epic poem, that he empathizes with Satan's role. | |||
Parallels between Victor Frankenstein and Mary's husband, Percy Shelley, have also been drawn. Percy Shelley was the first-born son of a wealthy country squire with strong political connections and a descendant of Sir ], 1st Baronet of ], and Richard Fitzalan, 10th ].<ref>]</ref> Similarly, Victor's family is one of the most distinguished of that republic and his ancestors were counsellors and ]s. Percy's sister and Victor's adopted sister were both named Elizabeth. There are many other similarities, from Percy's usage of "Victor" as a pen name for '']'', a collection of poetry he wrote with Elizabeth,<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | last =Sandy | first =Mark | title =Original Poetry by Victor and Cazire | encyclopedia =] | publisher =The Literary Dictionary Company | date =20 September 2002 | url =http://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=3010 | access-date =2 January 2007 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20061108135507/http://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=3010 | archive-date =8 November 2006 | url-status =live }}</ref> to Percy's days at Eton, where he had "experimented with electricity and magnetism as well as with gunpowder and numerous chemical reactions," and the way in which Percy's rooms at ] were filled with scientific equipment.<ref>{{cite web | title =Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822) | publisher =Department of English, ] | work =Romantic Natural History | url =http://www.dickinson.edu/~nicholsa/Romnat/pbshelley.htm | access-date =2 January 2007 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20060816015001/http://www.dickinson.edu/~nicholsa/Romnat/pbshelley.htm | archive-date =16 August 2006 | url-status =live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Goulding|first=Christopher|date=2002|title=The real Doctor Frankenstein?|journal=Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine|volume=95|issue=5|pages=257–259|doi=10.1177/014107680209500514|issn=0141-0768|pmc=1279684|pmid=11983772}}</ref> | |||
===Modern Prometheus=== | |||
''The Modern Prometheus'' is the novel's subtitle (though modern editions now drop it, only mentioning it in introduction).<ref>For example, the Longman study edition published in India in 2007 by Pearson Education</ref> ], in versions of Greek mythology, was the ] who created humans in the image of the gods so that they could have a spirit breathed into them at the behest of ].<ref>In the best-known versions of the Prometheus story, by Hesiod and Aeschylus, Prometheus merely brings fire to humankind, but in other versions, such as several of Aesop's fables (See in particular Fable 516), Sappho (Fragment 207), and Ovid's Metamorphoses, Prometheus is the actual creator of humanity.</ref> Prometheus then taught humans to hunt, but after he tricked Zeus into accepting "poor-quality offerings" from humans, Zeus kept fire from humankind. Prometheus took back the fire from Zeus to give to humanity. When Zeus discovered this, he sentenced Prometheus to be eternally punished by fixing him to a rock of ], where each day an eagle pecked out his liver, only for the liver to regrow the next day because of his immortality as a god. | |||
As a ], or believer in '']'' by ],<ref name=":5">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NXEytZwWziEC&q=mary+shelley+vegetarian&pg=PA196|title=The Cambridge Companion to Shelley|last=Morton|first=Timothy|date=2006-09-21|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9781139827072}}</ref> Mary Shelley saw Prometheus not as a hero but rather as something of a devil, and blamed him for bringing fire to humanity and thereby seducing the human race to the vice of eating meat.<ref>(], p. 20).</ref>{{full citation needed|date=December 2024}} Percy wrote several essays on what became known as vegetarianism including '']''.<ref name=":5" /> | |||
] released the ] of Shelley's story.]] | |||
Byron was particularly attached to the play '']'' by ], and Percy Shelley soon wrote his own '']'' (1820). The term "Modern Prometheus" was derived from ] who described ] as the "Prometheus of modern times" in reference to his experiments with electricity.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Benjamin Franklin in London|url=http://royalsociety.org/exhibitions/2006/benjamin-franklin/|website=The Royal Society |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130512063335/http://royalsociety.org/exhibitions/2006/benjamin-franklin/ |archive-date= 12 May 2013 |url-status=dead |access-date=8 August 2007}}</ref> | |||
==Publication== | |||
Shelley completed her writing in April/May 1817, and ''Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus'' was published on 1 January 1818<ref name="Robinson1996">{{cite book|last=Robinson|first=Charles|title=The Frankenstein Notebooks: A Facsimile Edition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9q6tjgEACAAJ|year=1996|publisher=Garland Publishing, Inc.|volume=1|page=xxv|quote="She began that novel as Mary Godwin in June 1816 when she was eighteen years old, she finished it as Mary Shelley in April/May 1817 when she was nineteen . . . and she published it anonymously on 1 January 1818 when she was twenty."|access-date=15 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170316132025/https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Frankenstein_Notebooks.html?id=9q6tjgEACAAJ|archive-date=16 March 2017|url-status=live}}</ref> by the small London publishing house Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, & Jones.<ref>Bennett, Betty T. Mary Wollstonecraft. ''Shelley: An Introduction.'' Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998</ref><ref>D. L. Macdonald and Kathleen Scherf, "A Note on the Text", Frankenstein, 2nd ed., Peterborough: Broadview Press, 1999.</ref> It was issued anonymously, with a preface written for Mary by Percy Bysshe Shelley and with a dedication to philosopher ], her father. It was published in an edition of just 500 copies in three volumes, the standard "]" format for 19th-century first editions. | |||
] | |||
A French translation (''Frankenstein: ou le Prométhée Moderne'', translated by Jules Saladin) appeared as early as 1821. The second English edition of ''Frankenstein'' was published on 11 August 1823 in two volumes (by G. and W. B. Whittaker) following the success of the stage play '']'' by ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qykBJvG0iJQC&pg=PA3|first= Mary |last=Wollstonecraft Shelley|author-link=Mary Shelley|title= Frankenstein|publisher= Bedford Publishing |year=2000|page= 3|isbn= 978-0312227623 }}</ref> This edition credited Mary Shelley as the book's author on its title page. | |||
On 31 October 1831, the first "popular" edition in one volume appeared, published by ] & ].<ref>See forward to ''Barnes and Noble'' classic edition.{{full citation needed|date=March 2024}}</ref> This edition was heavily revised by Mary Shelley, partially to make the story less radical. It included a lengthy new preface by the author, presenting a somewhat embellished version of the genesis of the story. This edition is the one most widely published and read now, although a few editions follow the 1818 text.<ref>The edition published by ''Forgotten Books'' is the original text, as is the "Ignatius Critical Edition". ''Vintage Books'' has an edition presenting both versions.</ref> Some scholars such as ] prefer the original version, arguing that it preserves the spirit of Mary Shelley's vision.<ref>{{cite book|first=Anne K. |last=Mellor |chapter=Choosing a Text of ''Frankenstein'' to Teach |title=Approaches to Teaching Shelley's ''Frankenstein'' |editor-last=Behrendt |editor-first=Stephen C. |publisher=Modern Language Association of America |date=1990 |location=New York |isbn=0-87352-539-6 |pages=31–37}} ].]</ref> | |||
== Reception == | |||
Contemporary critical reviews were mixed. ], writing in '']'', praised the novel as an "extraordinary tale, in which the author seems to us to disclose uncommon powers of poetic imagination," although he was less convinced about the way in which the monster gains knowledge about the world and language.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Scott|first=Walter|date=March 1818|title=Remarks on Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus; A Novel|url=http://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/bemrev.html|journal=Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine|pages=613–620|access-date=14 January 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200114230307/https://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/bemrev.html|archive-date=14 January 2020|url-status=live}}</ref> '']'' described the novel as "very bold fiction"<ref>{{Cite magazine|date=1818-02-01|title=Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus. 3 vols. 12mo. Lackington and Co.|url=http://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/barev.html|magazine=La Belle Assemblée |series=New Series|pages=139–142|access-date=14 January 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200114224740/http://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/barev.html|archive-date=14 January 2020|url-status=live}}</ref> and the '']'' hoped to see "more productions ... from this author".<ref>{{Cite magazine|date=March 1818|title=Review – Frankenstein|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044092547710&view=1up&seq=259|magazine=The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany |series=New Series |pages=249–253}}</ref> On the other hand, ], writing anonymously in the '']'', although conceding that "the author has powers, both of conception and language," described the book as "a tissue of horrible and disgusting absurdity."<ref name=":6">{{cite journal|title=Review of ''Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus''|journal=The Quarterly Review|date=January 1818|volume=18|pages=379–85|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044092624956;view=1up;seq=389|access-date=18 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181106171936/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044092624956;view=1up;seq=389|archive-date=6 November 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The '']'' attacked the novel's flaws as the fault of the author: | |||
<blockquote>The writer of it is, we understand, a female; this is an aggravation of that which is the prevailing fault of the novel; but if our authoress can forget the gentleness of her sex, it is no reason why we should; and we shall therefore dismiss the novel without further comment.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=April 1818|title=Art. XII. Frankenstein: or the Modern Prometheus. 3 vols. 12mo. 16s. 6d. Lackington and Co. 1818.|url=https://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/bcrev.html|journal=The British Critic |series=New Series|volume=9|pages=432–438|access-date=14 January 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200114224651/https://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/bcrev.html|archive-date=14 January 2020|url-status=live}}</ref> </blockquote> | |||
''The Literary Panorama and National Register'' attacked the novel as a "feeble imitation of ]'s novels" produced by the "daughter of a celebrated living novelist."<ref>{{Cite journal|date=June 1818|title=Frankenstein; or, the modern Prometheus. 3 vols. Lackington and Co. 1818|url=https://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/lprev.html|journal=The Literary Panorama and National Register |series=New Series|volume=8|pages=411–414|access-date=14 January 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200114225926/https://romantic-circles.org/reference/chronologies/mschronology/reviews/lprev.html|archive-date=14 January 2020|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Despite these reviews, ''Frankenstein'' achieved an almost immediate popular success. It became widely known, especially through melodramatic theatrical adaptations. Mary Shelley saw a production of ''Presumption; or The Fate of Frankenstein'', a play by ], in 1823. | |||
Critical reception of ''Frankenstein'' has been largely positive since the mid-20th century.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.enotes.com/nineteenth-century-criticism/frankenstein-modern-prometheus-mary-wollstonecraft |title=Enotes.com |publisher=Enotes.com |access-date=28 August 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100924042953/http://www.enotes.com/nineteenth-century-criticism/frankenstein-modern-prometheus-mary-wollstonecraft |archive-date=24 September 2010 |url-status=live }}</ref> Major critics such as M. A. Goldberg and ] have praised the "aesthetic and moral" relevance of the novel,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.octc.kctcs.edu/crunyon/CE/Frankenstein/Bloom/4-7_BloomIntro.htm |title=KCTCS.edu |publisher=Octc.kctcs.edu |access-date=28 August 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041115203418/http://www.octc.kctcs.edu/crunyon/CE/Frankenstein/Bloom/4-7_BloomIntro.htm |archive-date=15 November 2004 |url-status=dead }}</ref> although there have also been critics, such as ], who criticized the novel for technical and narrative defects: for example, she claimed that its three narrators all speak in the same way.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/apr/09/gender.books | title=Yes, Frankenstein really was written by Mary Shelley. It's obvious – because the book is so bad | work=The Guardian|location=London | author=Germaine Greer | date=2007-04-09 | access-date=2016-10-04 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161006091847/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/apr/09/gender.books | archive-date=6 October 2016 | url-status=live }}</ref> In more recent years the novel has become a popular subject for psychoanalytic and feminist criticism: Lawrence Lipking states: "ven the ] subgroup of psychoanalytic criticism, for instance, has produced at least half a dozen discrete readings of the novel".<ref>L. Lipking. Frankenstein the True Story; or ] Judges Jean-Jacques. (Published in the ] critical edition. 1996)</ref> ''Frankenstein'' has frequently been recommended on ''Five Books'', with literary scholars, psychologists, novelists, and historians citing it as an influential text.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fivebooks.com/book/frankenstein-by-mary-shelley/|title=Frankenstein by Mary Shelley {{!}} Five Books Expert Reviews|author=Five Books|website=Five Books|access-date=2019-09-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190324222556/https://fivebooks.com/book/frankenstein-by-mary-shelley/|archive-date=24 March 2019|url-status=live}}</ref> Today, the novel is generally considered to be a landmark work as one of the greatest Romantic and Gothic novels, as well as one of the first science fiction novels.<ref>{{Cite web|first=Lynn |last=Alexander|publisher=Department of English, University of Tennessee at Martin|url=http://www.utm.edu/staff/lalexand/frankqst.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203105236/http://www.utm.edu/staff/lalexand/frankqst.htm|archive-date=3 December 2010|url-status=dead|access-date=27 August 2009 |title=Mary Shelley, ''Frankenstein''}}</ref> | |||
] has argued for regarding it as the ] story. In contrast to previous stories with fantastical elements resembling those of later science fiction, Aldiss states, the central character "makes a deliberate decision" and "turns to modern experiments in the laboratory" to achieve fantastic results.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Aldiss|first=Brian Wilson|url=http://archive.org/details/detachedretinaas00aldi|title=The detached retina : aspects of SF and fantasy|date=1995|publisher=Syracuse, N.Y. : Syracuse University Press|others=Internet Archive|isbn=978-0-8156-2681-7}}</ref> | |||
Film director ] describes ''Frankenstein'' as "the quintessential teenage book", noting that the feelings that "You don't belong. You were brought to this world by people that don't care for you and you are thrown into a world of pain and suffering, and tears and hunger" are an important part of the story. He adds that "it's an amazing book written by a teenage girl. It's mind-blowing."<ref name="BBC 2018"/> Professor of philosophy ] says that the Creature addresses the most fundamental human questions: "It's the idea of asking your maker what your purpose is. Why are we here, what can we do?"<ref name="BBC 2018">{{cite news|title=Frankenstein: Behind the monster smash|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-42411484|publisher=BBC|date=1 January 2018|access-date=21 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180727232736/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-42411484|archive-date=27 July 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
On 5 November 2019, ] included ''Frankenstein'' in its list of the ].<ref name=Bbc2019-11-05/> In 2018, ] released series of 8 stamps celebrating the 200th anniversary of ''Frankenstein''.<ref>{{cite web|title=Celebrating the 200th anniversary of Frankenstein! Eight spooky stamps introduced by Jersey Post |url=https://findyourstampsvalue.com/news/celebrating-the-200th-anniversary-of-frankenstein-eight-spooky-stamps-introduced-by-jersey-post |website=findyourstampsvalue.com |date=May 8, 2018 |access-date=November 28, 2024}}</ref> In 2021 it was one of six classic science fiction novels by British authors selected by ] to be featured on a ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/national/19220163.stamps-feature-original-artworks-celebrating-classic-science-fiction-novels/|title=Stamps to feature original artworks celebrating classic science fiction novels|website=Yorkpress.co.uk|date=9 April 2021|accessdate=20 September 2022}}</ref> | |||
==Films, plays, and television== | |||
{{Main|Frankenstein in popular culture|List of films featuring Frankenstein's monster}} | |||
The ],<ref>"Frankenstein. 1931.1080p. Blu Ray. H 264. AAC RARBG." Internet Archive, 1931, archive.org/details/frankenstein.1931.1080p.bluray.h264.aacrarbg.</ref> with ] playing the monster, is considered the most prominent portrayal of ''Frankenstein''.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Anderson|first=John|date=2022-01-25|title='Boris Karloff: The Man Behind the Monster' Review: A Very Different Creature|work=]|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/boris-karloff-the-man-behind-the-monster-shudder-frankenstein-the-mummy-how-the-grinch-stole-christmas-11643149446|access-date=2022-01-26|issn=0099-9660}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Portal|United Kingdom|Books}} | |||
*] | |||
{{cols|colwidth=21em}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* The ] was thought to be a living being created through alchemy. | |||
* '']'' | |||
* The ] was a living being created from clay through ]. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
{{colend}} | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{reflist|group=note}} | |||
<references /> | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|30em|refs= | |||
<ref name=Bbc2019-11-05>{{cite news | |||
| url = https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-50302788 | |||
| title = 100 'most inspiring' novels revealed by BBC Arts | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| date = 2019-11-05 | |||
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191108030557/https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-50302788 | |||
| archive-date = 8 November 2019 | |||
| access-date = 2019-11-10 | |||
| url-status = live | |||
| quote = The reveal kickstarts the BBC's year-long celebration of literature. | |||
}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
== Sources == | |||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | |||
* Aldiss, Brian W. "On the Origin of Species: Mary Shelley". ''Speculations on Speculation: Theories of Science Fiction''. Eds. James Gunn and Matthew Candelaria. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow, 2005. | |||
* Baldick, Chris. ''In Frankenstein's Shadow: Myth, Monstrosity, and Nineteenth-Century Writing''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987. | |||
* Bann, Stephen, ed. ''"Frankenstein": Creation and Monstrosity''. London: Reaktion, 1994. | |||
* Behrendt, Stephen C., ed. ''Approaches to Teaching Shelley's "Frankenstein"''. New York: MLA, 1990. | |||
* Bennett, Betty T. and Stuart Curran, eds. ''Mary Shelley in Her Times''. Baltimore: ], 2000. | |||
* Bennett, Betty T. ''Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley: An Introduction.'' Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998. {{ISBN|0-8018-5976-X}}. | |||
* Bohls, Elizabeth A. "Standards of Taste, Discourses of 'Race', and the Aesthetic Education of a Monster: Critique of Empire in ''Frankenstein''". ''Eighteenth-Century Life'' 18.3 (1994): 23–36. | |||
* Botting, Fred. ''Making Monstrous: "Frankenstein", Criticism, Theory''. New York: St. Martin's, 1991. | |||
* Chapman, D. ''That Not Impossible She: A study of gender construction and Individualism in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein'', UK: Concept, 2011. {{ISBN|978-1480047617}} | |||
* Clery, E. J. ''Women's Gothic: From Clara Reeve to Mary Shelley''. Plymouth: Northcote House, 2000. | |||
* Conger, Syndy M., Frederick S. Frank, and Gregory O'Dea, eds. ''Iconoclastic Departures: Mary Shelley after "Frankenstein": Essays in Honor of the Bicentenary of Mary Shelley's Birth''. Madison, New Jersey: ], 1997. | |||
* Donawerth, Jane. ''Frankenstein's Daughters: Women Writing Science Fiction''. Syracuse: ], 1997. | |||
* Douthwaite, Julia V. "The Frankenstein of the French Revolution," chapter two of {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121116230136/http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/F/bo13265096.html |date=16 November 2012 }}. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012. | |||
* Dunn, Richard J. "Narrative Distance in ''Frankenstein''". ''Studies in the Novel'' 6 (1974): 408–17. | |||
* Eberle-Sinatra, Michael, ed. ''Mary Shelley's Fictions: From "Frankenstein" to "Falkner"''. New York: ], 2000. | |||
* Ellis, Kate Ferguson. ''The Contested Castle: Gothic Novels and the Subversion of Domestic Ideology''. Urbana: ], 1989. | |||
* {{Cite book |last = Florescu |first = Radu |author-link = Radu Florescu |year = 1996 |title = In Search of Frankenstein: Exploring the Myths Behind Mary Shelley's Monster |edition = 2nd |location = London |publisher = ] |isbn = 978-1-861-05033-5 |url-access = registration |url = https://archive.org/details/insearchoffranke0000flor }} | |||
* Forry, Steven Earl. ''Hideous Progenies: Dramatizations of "Frankenstein" from Mary Shelley to the Present''. Philadelphia: ], 1990. | |||
* Freedman, Carl. "Hail Mary: On the Author of ''Frankenstein'' and the Origins of Science Fiction". ''Science Fiction Studies'' 29.2 (2002): 253–64. | |||
* Gigante, Denise. "Facing the Ugly: The Case of ''Frankenstein''". ''ELH'' 67.2 (2000): 565–87. | |||
* Gilbert, Sandra and Susan Gubar. ''The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination''. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1979. | |||
* Hay, Daisy "Young Romantics" (2010): 103. | |||
* Heffernan, James A. W. "Looking at the Monster: ''Frankenstein'' and Film". ''Critical Inquiry'' 24.1 (1997): 133–58. | |||
* Hodges, Devon. "''Frankenstein'' and the Feminine Subversion of the Novel". ''Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature'' 2.2 (1983): 155–64. | |||
* Hoeveler, Diane Long. ''Gothic Feminism: The Professionalization of Gender from Charlotte Smith to the Brontës''. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998. | |||
* ]. ''Shelley: The Pursuit''. 1974. London: Harper Perennial, 2003. {{ISBN|0-00-720458-2}}. | |||
* {{Cite journal |last = Jones |first = Frederick L. |year = 1952 |title = Shelley and Milton |journal = Studies in Philology |volume = 49 |number = 3 |pages = 488–519 |jstor = 4173024 }} | |||
* Knoepflmacher, U. C. and ], eds. ''The Endurance of "Frankenstein": Essays on Mary Shelley's Novel''. Berkeley: ], 1979. | |||
* Lew, Joseph W. "The Deceptive Other: Mary Shelley's Critique of Orientalism in ''Frankenstein''". ''Studies in Romanticism'' 30.2 (1991): 255–83. | |||
* London, Bette. "Mary Shelley, ''Frankenstein'', and the Spectacle of Masculinity". ''PMLA'' 108.2 (1993): 256–67. | |||
* Mellor, Anne K. ''Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters''. New York: Methuen, 1988. | |||
* Michaud, Nicolas, ''Frankenstein and Philosophy: The Shocking Truth'', Chicago: Open Court, 2013. | |||
* Miles, Robert. ''Gothic Writing 1750–1820: A Genealogy''. London: Routledge, 1993. | |||
* Milner, Andrew. ''Literature, Culture and Society''. London: Routledge, 2005, ch.5. | |||
* O'Flinn, Paul. "Production and Reproduction: The Case of ''Frankenstein''". ''Literature and History'' 9.2 (1983): 194–213. | |||
* Poovey, Mary. ''The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer: Ideology as Style in the Works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley, and Jane Austen''. Chicago: ], 1984. | |||
* Rauch, Alan. "The Monstrous Body of Knowledge in Mary Shelley's ''Frankenstein''". ''Studies in Romanticism'' 34.2 (1995): 227–53. | |||
* Selbanev, Xtopher. "Natural Philosophy of the Soul", Western Press, 1999. | |||
* Schor, Esther, ed. ''The Cambridge Companion to Mary Shelley''. Cambridge: ], 2003. | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Scott|first= Grant F. |title=Victor's Secret: Queer Gothic in Lynd Ward's Illustrations to Frankenstein (1934)|journal=Word & Image |date= April–June 2012|volume = 28|issue= 2 |pages= 206–32|doi=10.1080/02666286.2012.687545|s2cid= 154238300 }} | |||
* Smith, Johanna M., ed. ''Frankenstein''. ''Case Studies in Contemporary Criticism''. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 1992. | |||
* ]. ''Mary Shelley''. London: Cardinal, 1987. {{ISBN|0-7474-0318-X}}. | |||
* Stableford, Brian. "''Frankenstein'' and the Origins of Science Fiction". ''Anticipations: Essays on Early Science Fiction and Its Precursors''. Ed. David Seed. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1995. | |||
* ] ''Mary Shelley: Romance and Reality''. 1989. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991. {{ISBN|0-8018-4218-2}}. | |||
* Tropp, Martin. ''Mary Shelley's Monster''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1976. | |||
* Veeder, William. ''Mary Shelley & Frankenstein: The Fate of Androgyny''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986. | |||
* Williams, Anne. ''The Art of Darkness: A Poetics of Gothic''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995. | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
* {{cite news |last1=Holmes |first1=Richard |author1-link=Richard Holmes (biographer) |title=Out of Control |url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2017/12/21/frankenstein-out-of-control/ |access-date=29 December 2024 |work=] |date=21 December 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171214073411/http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2017/12/21/frankenstein-out-of-control/ |archive-date=2017-12-14 |language=en |quote=After two hundred years, how exactly are we to go back to Mary Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein’ itself, as distinct from its proliferating, multimedia myth?}}, review of: | |||
*Comroe, Julius H., Jr. (1975). . Analyzes errors in the re-telling of Mary Shelley's original plot. | |||
:* ], ''Frankenstein, Or, The Modern Prometheus: Annotated for Scientists, Engineers, and Creators of All Kinds'', edited by David H. Guston, Ed Finn, and Jason Scott Robert, ], 277 pp. | |||
* ]. ''In Search of Frankenstein'' | |||
:* ], ''The New Annotated Frankenstein'', edited and with a foreword and notes by ], ], 352 pp.), '']'', vol. LXIV, no. 20 (21 December 2017), pp. 38, 40–41. | |||
* Garrett, Martin (2002). ''Mary Shelley''. | |||
* Lylys, William H. (1975). ''Mary Shelley, an Annotated Bibliography'' | |||
===Editions=== | |||
* Mellor, Anne K. (1990). "Choosing a Text of Frankenstein to Teach." In ''Approaches to Teaching Frankenstein''. | |||
====1818 text==== | |||
* ]. ''The Confessions of a Trivialist'' | |||
* Shelley, Mary ''Frankenstein: 1818 text'' (Oxford University Press, 2009). Edited with an introduction and notes by ]. | |||
* ]. ''Mary Shelley'' | |||
* Shelley, Mary ''Frankenstein: The 1818 Text'' (Penguin Books, 2018). Edited with an introduction by ]. | |||
* Wolf, Leonard (2004). ''The Essential Frankenstein''. ISBN 0-7434-9806-2. The complete original text of Mary Shelley's novel, fully annotated with thousands of facts and legends. | |||
*], '''', edited by David H. Guston, Ed Finn, and Jason Scott Robert, ], 277 pp. {{doi|10.7551/mitpress/10815.001.0001}}{{open access}} | |||
* Day. A.J. (editor). ''Fantasmagoriana: Tales of the Dead'' (2005) ISBN 1-4116-5291-6 | |||
====1831 text==== | |||
* Fairclough, Peter (ed.) ''Three Gothic Novels: Walpole / Castle of Otranto, Beckford / Vathek, Mary Shelley / Frankenstein'' (Penguin English Library, 1968). With an introductory essay by ]. | |||
* Shelley, Mary ''Frankenstein'' (Oxford University Press, 2008). Edited with an introduction and notes by ]. | |||
===Differences between 1818 and 1831 text=== | |||
Shelley made several alterations in the 1831 edition including: | |||
*The epigraph from Milton's ''Paradise Lost'' found in the 1818 original has been removed. | |||
*Chapter one is expanded and split into two chapters. | |||
*Elizabeth's origin is changed from Victor's cousin to being an orphan. | |||
*Victor is portrayed more sympathetically in the original text. In the 1831 edition however, Shelley is critical of his decisions and actions. | |||
*Shelley removed many references to scientific ideas which were popular around the time she wrote the 1818 edition of the book. | |||
*Characters in the 1831 version have some dialogue removed entirely while others receive new dialogue. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{sister project links|display=''Frankenstein''|d=Q150827|c=Category:Frankenstein|n=no|b=no|v=no|voy=no|m=no|mw=no|species=no}} | |||
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* {{cite web <!-- |last1=Stoicheff |first1=Peter |last2=Owen |first2=Corey |last3=Bath |first3=Jon |last4=Deshaye |first4=Joel |last5=Mitchell |first5=Dave --> |title=Frankenstein: a hypertext resource |url=https://drc.usask.ca/projects/frankenstein/mainindex.htm |website=English Department |publisher=<!-- Digital Research Centre, --> ] <!-- |access-date=29 December 2024 |date=August 23, 1999 -->}} | |||
<div style="margin-left: 60px;">] has original text related to this article: | |||
* at ] | |||
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*{{gutenberg|no=84|name=Frankenstein}} (omits the prefaces) | |||
* from (without prefaces and edition information) | |||
* (w/ the prefaces) | |||
* (annotated edition containing also critical articles and variety of other resources) | |||
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'''Editions''' | |||
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* {{Gutenberg|no=41445|name=Frankenstein 1818 edition}} | |||
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* {{Gutenberg|no=42324|name=Frankenstein 1831 edition}} | |||
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* at ] | |||
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* {{Librivox book | title=Frankenstein | author=Mary Shelley}} | |||
* {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/mary-shelley/frankenstein}} | |||
'''Sources''' | |||
* Shelley's notebooks with her handwritten draft of ''Frankenstein'' | |||
:* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190810021645/http://shelleysghost.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/Frankenstein-notebook-reader#page/1/mode/2up |date=10 August 2019 }} | |||
:* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180130094927/http://shelleysghost.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/Frankenstein-notebook-reader2#page/1/mode/2up |date=30 January 2018 }} | |||
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Latest revision as of 03:02, 10 January 2025
1818 novel by Mary Shelley This article is about the novel by Mary Shelley. For other uses, see Frankenstein (disambiguation).This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Frankenstein" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Volume I, first edition | |
Author | Mary Shelley |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Gothic novel, horror fiction, science fiction |
Set in | England, Ireland, Italy, France, Scotland, Old Swiss Confederacy, Russian Empire, Holy Roman Empire; late 18th century |
Published | 1 January 1818; 207 years ago (1818-01-01) |
Publisher | Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones |
Publication place | England |
Pages | 280 |
Dewey Decimal | 823.7 |
LC Class | PR5397 .F7 |
Preceded by | History of a Six Weeks' Tour |
Followed by | Valperga |
Text | Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus at Wikisource |
Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus is an 1818 Gothic novel written by English author Mary Shelley. Frankenstein tells the story of Victor Frankenstein, a young scientist who creates a sapient creature in an unorthodox scientific experiment. Shelley started writing the story when she was 18, and the first edition was published anonymously in London on 1 January 1818, when she was 20. Her name first appeared in the second edition, which was published in Paris in 1821.
Shelley travelled through Europe in 1815, moving along the river Rhine in Germany, and stopping in Gernsheim, 17 kilometres (11 mi) away from Frankenstein Castle, where, about a century earlier, Johann Konrad Dippel, an alchemist, had engaged in experiments. She then journeyed to the region of Geneva, Switzerland, where much of the story takes place. Galvanism and occult ideas were topics of conversation for her companions, particularly for her lover and future husband Percy Bysshe Shelley.
In 1816, Mary, Percy, John Polidori, and Lord Byron had a competition to see who would write the best horror story. After thinking for days, Shelley was inspired to write Frankenstein after imagining a scientist who created life and was horrified by what he had made.
Frankenstein is one of the best-known works of English literature. Infused with elements of the Gothic novel and the Romantic movement, it has had a considerable influence on literature and on popular culture, spawning a complete genre of horror stories, films, and plays. Since the publication of the novel, the name "Frankenstein" has often been used to refer to the monster.
Summary
Background
Frankenstein is a frame story written in epistolary form. Set in the 18th century, it documents a fictional correspondence between Captain Robert Walton and his sister, Margaret Walton Saville.
Captain Walton introductory narrative
Captain Walton is a failed writer who sets out to explore the North Pole in hopes of expanding scientific knowledge. After departing from Archangel, the ship is trapped by pack ice on the journey across the Arctic Ocean. During this time, the crew spots a dog sled driven by a gigantic figure. A few hours later, the ice splits apart, freeing the ship, and the crew rescues a nearly frozen and emaciated man named Victor Frankenstein from a drifting ice floe. Victor has been in pursuit of the gigantic man observed by Walton's crew. Victor starts to recover from his exertion; he sees in Walton the same obsession that has destroyed him and recounts a story of his life's miseries to Walton as a warning.
Victor Frankenstein's narrative
Born in Naples, Italy, into a wealthy Genevan family, Victor and his younger brothers, Ernest and William, are sons of Alphonse Frankenstein and the former Caroline Beaufort. From a young age, Victor has a strong desire to understand the world. He is obsessed with studying theories of alchemists, though when he is older he realizes that such theories are considerably outdated. When Victor is five years old, his parents adopt Elizabeth Lavenza (the orphaned daughter of an expropriated Italian nobleman) whom Victor calls 'cousin'. Victor's parents later take in another child, Justine Moritz, who becomes William's nanny.
Weeks before he leaves for the University of Ingolstadt in Germany, his mother dies of scarlet fever; Victor buries himself in his experiments to deal with the grief. At the university, he excels at chemistry and other sciences, soon developing a secret technique to impart life to non-living matter. He undertakes the creation of a humanoid, but due to the difficulty in replicating the minute parts of the human body, Victor makes the Creature tall, about 8 feet (2.4 m) in height, and proportionally large. Victor works at gathering the vital organs by pilfering charnel houses, mortuaries and by entrapping and vivisecting feral animals. Despite Victor selecting its features to be beautiful, upon animation the Creature is instead hideous, with dull and watery yellow eyes and yellow skin that barely conceals the muscles and blood vessels underneath. Repulsed by his work, Victor flees. While wandering the streets the next day, he meets his childhood friend, Henry Clerval, and takes Henry back to his apartment, fearful of Henry's reaction if he sees the monster. However, when Victor returns to his laboratory, the Creature is gone.
Victor falls ill from the experience and is nursed back to health by Henry. After recovering he forgets about the Creature and goes into Henry's study of Oriental languages, which he considers the happiest time of his academic career. This is cut short when Victor receives a letter from his father notifying him of the murder of his brother William. Near Geneva, Victor sees a large figure and becomes convinced that his creation is responsible. Justine Moritz, William's nanny, is convicted of the crime after William's locket, which contained a miniature portrait of Caroline, is found in her pocket. Victor knows that no one will believe him if he testifies that it was the doing of the Creature; Justine is executed. Ravaged by grief and guilt, Victor takes up mountain climbing in the Alps. While hiking through Mont Blanc's Mer de Glace, he is suddenly approached by the Creature, who insists that Victor hear his tale.
The Creature's narrative
Intelligent and articulate, the Creature relates his first days of life, living alone in the wilderness. He found that people were afraid of him and hated him due to his appearance, which led him to fear and hide from them. While living in an abandoned structure connected to a cottage, he grew fond of the poor family living there and discreetly collected firewood for them, cleared snow away from their path, and performed other tasks to help them. Secretly living next to the cottage for months, the Creature learned that the son was going to marry a Turkish woman whom he was teaching his native language, which the Creature listened in on the lessons and taught himself to speak and write. The Creature also taught himself to read after discovering a lost satchel of books in the woods. When he saw his reflection in a pool, he realized his appearance was hideous, and it horrified him as much as it horrified normal humans. As he continued to learn of the family's plight, he grew increasingly attached to them, and eventually he approached the family in hopes of becoming their friend, entering the house while only the blind father, De Lacey, was present. The two conversed, but on the return of the others, the rest of them were frightened. De Lacey's son Felix attacked him, and the Creature fled the house. The next day, the family left their home out of fear that he would return. Witnessing this, the monster renounced any hope of being accepted by humanity, and vowed to get his revenge. Although he hated his creator for abandoning him, he decided to travel to Geneva to find him because he believed that Victor was the only person with a responsibility to help him. On the journey, he rescued a girl who had fallen into a river, but her father, believing that the Creature intended to harm them, shot him in the shoulder. The Creature then swore revenge against all humans. He travelled to Geneva using details from a combination of Victor's journal and geography lessons gleaned from the family. When in Switzerland he chanced upon William, who was at first frightened, and the Creature held his wrist to calm him. When William screamed and threatened punishment from his father, "M. Frankenstein", this sparked the creature into crushing William's throat to spite Victor. The Creature then took William's locket and later placed it into the dress of Justine, incriminating her as the murderer.
The Creature demands that Victor create a female companion like himself, arguing that as a living being, he has a right to happiness. The Creature promises that he and his mate will vanish into the South American wilderness, never to reappear, if Victor grants his request. Should Victor refuse, the Creature threatens to kill Victor's remaining friends and loved ones and not stop until he completely ruins him. Fearing for his family, Victor reluctantly agrees. The Creature says he will watch over Victor's progress.
Victor Frankenstein's narrative resumes
Henry accompanies Victor to England, but they separate, at Victor's insistence, at Perth, in Scotland. Travelling to Orkney to build the second creature, Victor suspects that the Creature is following him. As he works on the new creature, he is plagued by premonitions of disaster. He fears that the female will hate the Creature - or worse still - be even more evil than he is. Even more worrying to him is the idea that creating the second creature might lead to the creation of a race of beings just as strong as the monster who could plague humanity. He tears apart the unfinished female creature after he sees the Creature watching through a window and smiling. The Creature immediately bursts through the door to confront Victor and demands he repair his destruction and resume work, but Victor refuses. The Creature leaves, but gives a final threat: "I will be with you on your wedding night." Victor interprets this as a threat upon his life, believing that the Creature will kill him after he finally becomes happy.
Victor sails out to sea to dispose of his instruments, and falls asleep in the boat. He awakens some time later, unable to return to shore due to a change in the wind, and falls unconscious, drifting to Ireland. When Victor awakens, he is arrested for murder. Victor is acquitted when eyewitness testimony confirms that he was in Orkney at the time the murder took place. However, when shown the murder victim, Victor is horrified to see it was Henry, whom the Creature has strangled. Victor suffers another mental breakdown and after recovering, he returns home with his father, who has restored to Elizabeth some of her father's fortune. His father does not know of the cause behind the murders of William and Henry, but senses a curse and begs Victor to honour his mother's last wish that Victor marry Elizabeth.
In Geneva, Victor is about to marry Elizabeth and prepares to fight the Creature to the death, arming himself with pistols and a dagger. The night following their wedding, Victor asks Elizabeth to stay in her room while he looks for "the fiend". While Victor searches the house and grounds, the Creature strangles a screaming Elizabeth to death. From the window, Victor sees the Creature, who tauntingly points at Elizabeth's corpse; Victor tries to shoot him, but the Creature escapes. Victor's father Alphonse, weakened by age and by the death of Elizabeth, dies a few days later. Seeking revenge, Victor pursues the Creature across Europe and Russia, though his adversary stays one step ahead of him at all times. Eventually, the chase leads to the Arctic Ocean and then on towards the North Pole, and Victor reaches a point where he is within a mile of the Creature, but he collapses from exhaustion and hypothermia. Eventually the ice around Victor's sledge breaks apart, and the resultant ice floe comes within range of Walton's ship.
Captain Walton's conclusion
A few days after the Creature's vanishing, the ship is trapped by pack ice for a second time, and several crewmen die in the cold before the rest of Walton's crew insists on returning south once it is freed. Upon hearing the crew's demands, Victor is angered and, despite his condition, gives a powerful speech to them, reminding them that it is hardship and danger, not comfort, that defines a glorious undertaking such as theirs. However, although the speech makes an impression on the crew, it is not enough to change their minds. Knowing that continuing on would surely result in mutiny, Walton agrees to abandon the voyage and return home, but Victor, despite his condition, declares that he will continue to hunt the Creature, adamant that he must be killed.
Victor dies shortly thereafter, telling Walton, in his last words, to seek "happiness in tranquility and avoid ambition" but then refuting this, speculating that some other scientist might succeed where he has failed. Walton discovers the Creature on his ship, mourning over Victor's body. The Creature tells Walton that Victor's death has not brought him peace; rather, his crimes have made him even more miserable than Victor ever was. The Creature vows to burn himself on a funeral pyre so that no one else will ever know of his existence. Walton watches as the Creature drifts away on an ice raft, never to be seen again.
Author's background
Mary Shelley's mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, died from infection eleven days after giving birth to her. Shelley grew close to her father, William Godwin, having never known her mother. Godwin hired a nurse, who briefly cared for her and her half sister, before marrying his second wife Mary Jane Clairmont, who did not like the close bond between Shelley and her father. The resulting friction caused Godwin to favour his other children.
Shelley's father was a famous author of the time, and her education was of great importance to him, although it was not formal. Shelley grew up surrounded by her father's friends, writers, and persons of political importance, who often gathered at the family home. This inspired her authorship at an early age. Mary, at the age of sixteen, met Percy Bysshe Shelley (who later became her husband) while he was visiting her father. Godwin did not approve of the relationship between his daughter and an older, married man, so they fled to France along with her stepsister, Claire Clairmont. On 22 February 1815, Shelley gave birth prematurely to her first child, Clara, who died two weeks later.
In the summer of 1816, Mary, Percy, and Claire took a trip to visit Claire's lover, Lord Byron, in Geneva. Poor weather conditions, more akin to winter, forced Byron and the visitors to stay indoors. To help pass time, Byron suggested that he, Mary, Percy, and Byron's physician, John Polidori, have a competition to write the best ghost story to pass time stuck indoors. Mary was just eighteen years old when she won the contest with her creation of Frankenstein.
Literary influences
Shelley's work was heavily influenced by that of her parents. Her father was famous for Enquiry Concerning Political Justice and her mother famous for A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. Her father's novels also influenced her writing of Frankenstein. These novels included Things as They Are; or, The Adventures of Caleb Williams, St. Leon, and Fleetwood. All of these books were set in Switzerland, similar to the setting in Frankenstein. Some major themes of social affections and the renewal of life that appear in Shelley's novel stem from these works she had in her possession. Other literary influences that appear in Frankenstein are Pygmalion et Galatée by Mme de Genlis, and Ovid, with the use of individuals identifying the problems with society. Ovid also inspires the use of Prometheus in Shelley's title.
The influence of John Milton's Paradise Lost and Samuel Taylor Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner are evident in the novel. In The Frankenstein of the French Revolution, author Julia Douthwaite posits that Shelley probably acquired some ideas for Frankenstein's character from Humphry Davy's book Elements of Chemical Philosophy, in which he had written that,
science has ... bestowed upon man powers which may be called creative; which have enabled him to change and modify the beings around him ...
References to the French Revolution run through the novel; a likely source is François-Félix Nogaret [fr]'s Le Miroir des événemens actuels, ou la Belle au plus offrant (1790), a political parable about scientific progress featuring an inventor named Frankésteïn, who creates a life-sized automaton.
Both Frankenstein and the monster quote passages from Percy Shelley's 1816 poem, "Mutability", and its theme of the role of the subconscious is discussed in prose. Percy Shelley's name never appeared as the author of the poem, although the novel credits other quoted poets by name. Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" (1798) is associated with the theme of guilt and William Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey" (1798) with that of innocence.
Many writers and historians have attempted to associate several then-popular natural philosophers (now called physical scientists) with Shelley's work because of several notable similarities. Two of the most noted natural philosophers among Shelley's contemporaries were Giovanni Aldini, who made many public attempts at human reanimation through bio-electric Galvanism in London, and Johann Konrad Dippel, who was supposed to have developed chemical means to extend the life span of humans. While Shelley was aware of both of these men and their activities, she makes no mention of or reference to them or their experiments in any of her published or released notes.
Ideas about life and death discussed by Percy and Byron were of great interest to scientists of that time. They discussed ideas from Erasmus Darwin and the experiments of Luigi Galvani as well as James Lind. Mary joined these conversations and the ideas of Darwin, Galvani and perhaps Lind were present in her novel.
Shelley's personal experiences also influenced the themes within Frankenstein. The themes of loss, guilt, and the consequences of defying nature present in the novel all developed from Mary Shelley's own life. The loss of her mother, the relationship with her father, and the death of her first child are thought to have inspired the monster and his separation from parental guidance. In a 1965 issue of The Journal of Religion and Health a psychologist proposed that the theme of guilt stemmed from her not feeling good enough for Percy because of the loss of their child.
Composition
During the rainy summer of 1816, the "Year Without a Summer", the world was locked in a long, cold volcanic winter caused by the eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815. Mary Shelley, aged 18, and her lover (and future husband), Percy Bysshe Shelley, visited Lord Byron at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva, in Switzerland's Alps. The weather was too cold and dreary that summer to enjoy the outdoor holiday activities they had planned, so the group retired indoors until dawn.
Sitting around a log fire at Byron's villa, the company amused themselves by reading German ghost stories translated into French from the book Fantasmagoriana. Byron proposed that they "each write a ghost story." Unable to think of a story, Mary Shelley became anxious. She recalled being asked "Have you thought of a story?" each morning, and every time being "forced to reply with a mortifying negative." During one evening in the middle of summer, the discussions turned to the nature of the principle of life. "Perhaps a corpse would be re-animated," Mary noted, "galvanism had given token of such things". It was after midnight before they retired and, unable to sleep, she became possessed by her imagination as she beheld the "grim terrors" of her "waking dream".
I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together. I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion. Frightful must it be; for supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavour to mock the stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world.
In September 2011, astronomer Donald Olson, after a visit to the Lake Geneva villa the previous year and inspecting data about the motion of the moon and stars, concluded that her "waking dream" took place between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m. on 16 June 1816, several days after the initial idea by Lord Byron that they each write a ghost story.
Mary Shelley began writing what she assumed would be a short story, but with Percy Shelley's encouragement, she expanded the tale into a fully-fledged novel. She later described that summer in Switzerland as the moment "when I first stepped out from childhood into life." Shelley wrote the first four chapters in the weeks following the suicide of her half-sister Fanny. This was one of many personal tragedies that impacted Shelley's work. Shelley's first child died in infancy, and when she began composing Frankenstein in 1816, she was probably nursing her second child, who was also dead by the time of Frankenstein's publication. Shelley wrote much of the book while residing in a lodging house in the centre of Bath in 1816.
Byron managed to write just a fragment based on the vampire legends he heard while travelling the Balkans, and from this John Polidori created The Vampyre (1819), the progenitor of the romantic vampire literary genre. Thus two seminal horror tales originated from the conclave.
The group talked about Enlightenment and Counter-Enlightenment ideas as well. Mary Shelley believed the Enlightenment idea that society could progress and grow if political leaders used their powers responsibly; however, she also believed the Romantic ideal that misused power could destroy society.
Shelley's manuscripts for the first three-volume edition in 1818 (written 1816–1817), as well as the fair copy for her publisher, are now housed in the Bodleian Library in Oxford. The Bodleian acquired the papers in 2004, and they belong now to the Abinger Collection. In 2008, the Bodleian published a new edition of Frankenstein, edited by Charles E. Robinson, that contains comparisons of Mary Shelley's original text with Percy Shelley's additions and interventions alongside.
Frankenstein and the Monster
The Creature
Main article: Frankenstein's monsterAlthough the Creature was described in later works as a composite of whole body parts grafted together from cadavers and reanimated by the use of electricity, this description is not consistent with Shelley's work; both the use of electricity and the cobbled-together image of Frankenstein's monster were more the result of James Whale's popular 1931 film adaptation of the story and other early motion-picture works based on the creature. In Shelley's original work, Victor Frankenstein discovers a previously unknown but elemental principle of life, and that insight allows him to develop a method to imbue vitality into inanimate matter, though the exact nature of the process is left ambiguous. After a great deal of hesitation in exercising this power, Frankenstein spends two years painstakingly constructing the Creature's body (one anatomical feature at a time, from raw materials supplied by "the dissecting room and the slaughter-house"), which he then brings to life using his unspecified process.
Newspaper illustrations from abridged versions of Frankenstein, 1910Part of Frankenstein's rejection of his creation is the fact that he does not give him a name. Instead, Frankenstein's creation is referred to by words such as "wretch", "monster", "creature", "demon", "devil", "fiend", and "it". When Frankenstein converses with the creature, he addresses him as "vile insect", "abhorred monster", "fiend", "wretched devil", and "abhorred devil".
In the novel, the creature is compared to Adam, the first man in the Garden of Eden. The monster also compares himself with the "fallen" angel. Speaking to Frankenstein, the monster says "I ought to be thy Adam, but I am rather the fallen angel". That angel would be Lucifer (meaning "light-bringer") in Milton's Paradise Lost, which the monster has read. Adam is also referred to in the epigraph of the 1818 edition:
- Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay
- To mould Me man? Did I solicit thee
- From darkness to promote me?
Some have posited the creature as a composite of Percy Shelley and Thomas Paine. If the creature's hatred for Victor and his desire to raise a child mirror Percy's filial rebelliousness and his longing to adopt children, his desire to do good and his persecution can be said to echo Paine's utopian visions and fate in England.
The Creature has often been mistakenly called Frankenstein. In 1908, one author said "It is strange to note how well-nigh universally the term "Frankenstein" is misused, even by intelligent people, as describing some hideous monster." Edith Wharton's The Reef (1916) describes an unruly child as an "infant Frankenstein". David Lindsay's "The Bridal Ornament", published in The Rover, 12 June 1844, mentioned "the maker of poor Frankenstein". After the release of Whale's cinematic Frankenstein, the public at large began speaking of the Creature itself as "Frankenstein". This misnomer continued with the successful sequel Bride of Frankenstein (1935), as well as in film titles such as Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein.
Origin of Victor Frankenstein's name
Mary Shelley maintained that she derived the name Frankenstein from a dream-vision. This claim has since been disputed and debated by scholars that have suggested alternative sources for Shelley's inspiration. The German name Frankenstein means "stone of the Franks", and is associated with various places in Germany, including Frankenstein Castle (Burg Frankenstein) in Darmstadt, Hesse, and Frankenstein Castle in Frankenstein, a town in the Palatinate. There is also a castle called Frankenstein in Bad Salzungen, Thuringia, and a municipality called Frankenstein in Saxony. The town of Frankenstein in Silesia (now Ząbkowice, Poland) was the site of a scandal involving gravediggers in 1606, and this has been suggested as an inspiration to the author. Finally, the name is borne by the aristocratic House of Franckenstein from Franconia.
Radu Florescu argued that Mary and Percy Shelley visited Frankenstein Castle near Darmstadt in 1814, where alchemist Johann Konrad Dippel had experimented with human bodies, and reasoned that Mary suppressed mention of her visit to maintain her public claim of originality. A literary essay by A.J. Day supports Florescu's position that Mary Shelley knew of and visited Frankenstein Castle before writing her debut novel. Day includes details of an alleged description of the Frankenstein castle in Mary Shelley's "lost journals". However, according to Jörg Heléne, Day's and Florescu's claims cannot be verified.
A possible interpretation of the name "Victor" is derived from Paradise Lost by John Milton, a great influence on Shelley (a quotation from Paradise Lost is on the opening page of Frankenstein and Shelley writes that the monster reads it in the novel). Milton frequently refers to God as "the victor" in Paradise Lost, and Victor's creation of life in the novel is compared to God's creation of life in Paradise Lost. In addition, Shelley's portrayal of the monster owes much to the character of Satan in Paradise Lost; and, the monster says in the story, after reading the epic poem, that he empathizes with Satan's role.
Parallels between Victor Frankenstein and Mary's husband, Percy Shelley, have also been drawn. Percy Shelley was the first-born son of a wealthy country squire with strong political connections and a descendant of Sir Bysshe Shelley, 1st Baronet of Castle Goring, and Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel. Similarly, Victor's family is one of the most distinguished of that republic and his ancestors were counsellors and syndics. Percy's sister and Victor's adopted sister were both named Elizabeth. There are many other similarities, from Percy's usage of "Victor" as a pen name for Original Poetry by Victor and Cazire, a collection of poetry he wrote with Elizabeth, to Percy's days at Eton, where he had "experimented with electricity and magnetism as well as with gunpowder and numerous chemical reactions," and the way in which Percy's rooms at Oxford were filled with scientific equipment.
Modern Prometheus
The Modern Prometheus is the novel's subtitle (though modern editions now drop it, only mentioning it in introduction). Prometheus, in versions of Greek mythology, was the Titan who created humans in the image of the gods so that they could have a spirit breathed into them at the behest of Zeus. Prometheus then taught humans to hunt, but after he tricked Zeus into accepting "poor-quality offerings" from humans, Zeus kept fire from humankind. Prometheus took back the fire from Zeus to give to humanity. When Zeus discovered this, he sentenced Prometheus to be eternally punished by fixing him to a rock of Caucasus, where each day an eagle pecked out his liver, only for the liver to regrow the next day because of his immortality as a god.
As a Pythagorean, or believer in An Essay on Abstinence from Animal Food, as a Moral Duty by Joseph Ritson, Mary Shelley saw Prometheus not as a hero but rather as something of a devil, and blamed him for bringing fire to humanity and thereby seducing the human race to the vice of eating meat. Percy wrote several essays on what became known as vegetarianism including A Vindication of Natural Diet.
Byron was particularly attached to the play Prometheus Bound by Aeschylus, and Percy Shelley soon wrote his own Prometheus Unbound (1820). The term "Modern Prometheus" was derived from Immanuel Kant who described Benjamin Franklin as the "Prometheus of modern times" in reference to his experiments with electricity.
Publication
Shelley completed her writing in April/May 1817, and Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus was published on 1 January 1818 by the small London publishing house Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, & Jones. It was issued anonymously, with a preface written for Mary by Percy Bysshe Shelley and with a dedication to philosopher William Godwin, her father. It was published in an edition of just 500 copies in three volumes, the standard "triple-decker" format for 19th-century first editions.
A French translation (Frankenstein: ou le Prométhée Moderne, translated by Jules Saladin) appeared as early as 1821. The second English edition of Frankenstein was published on 11 August 1823 in two volumes (by G. and W. B. Whittaker) following the success of the stage play Presumption; or, the Fate of Frankenstein by Richard Brinsley Peake. This edition credited Mary Shelley as the book's author on its title page.
On 31 October 1831, the first "popular" edition in one volume appeared, published by Henry Colburn & Richard Bentley. This edition was heavily revised by Mary Shelley, partially to make the story less radical. It included a lengthy new preface by the author, presenting a somewhat embellished version of the genesis of the story. This edition is the one most widely published and read now, although a few editions follow the 1818 text. Some scholars such as Anne K. Mellor prefer the original version, arguing that it preserves the spirit of Mary Shelley's vision.
Reception
Contemporary critical reviews were mixed. Walter Scott, writing in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, praised the novel as an "extraordinary tale, in which the author seems to us to disclose uncommon powers of poetic imagination," although he was less convinced about the way in which the monster gains knowledge about the world and language. La Belle Assemblée described the novel as "very bold fiction" and the Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany hoped to see "more productions ... from this author". On the other hand, John Wilson Croker, writing anonymously in the Quarterly Review, although conceding that "the author has powers, both of conception and language," described the book as "a tissue of horrible and disgusting absurdity."
The British Critic attacked the novel's flaws as the fault of the author:
The writer of it is, we understand, a female; this is an aggravation of that which is the prevailing fault of the novel; but if our authoress can forget the gentleness of her sex, it is no reason why we should; and we shall therefore dismiss the novel without further comment.
The Literary Panorama and National Register attacked the novel as a "feeble imitation of Mr. Godwin's novels" produced by the "daughter of a celebrated living novelist."
Despite these reviews, Frankenstein achieved an almost immediate popular success. It became widely known, especially through melodramatic theatrical adaptations. Mary Shelley saw a production of Presumption; or The Fate of Frankenstein, a play by Richard Brinsley Peake, in 1823.
Critical reception of Frankenstein has been largely positive since the mid-20th century. Major critics such as M. A. Goldberg and Harold Bloom have praised the "aesthetic and moral" relevance of the novel, although there have also been critics, such as Germaine Greer, who criticized the novel for technical and narrative defects: for example, she claimed that its three narrators all speak in the same way. In more recent years the novel has become a popular subject for psychoanalytic and feminist criticism: Lawrence Lipking states: "ven the Lacanian subgroup of psychoanalytic criticism, for instance, has produced at least half a dozen discrete readings of the novel". Frankenstein has frequently been recommended on Five Books, with literary scholars, psychologists, novelists, and historians citing it as an influential text. Today, the novel is generally considered to be a landmark work as one of the greatest Romantic and Gothic novels, as well as one of the first science fiction novels.
Brian Aldiss has argued for regarding it as the first true science-fiction story. In contrast to previous stories with fantastical elements resembling those of later science fiction, Aldiss states, the central character "makes a deliberate decision" and "turns to modern experiments in the laboratory" to achieve fantastic results.
Film director Guillermo del Toro describes Frankenstein as "the quintessential teenage book", noting that the feelings that "You don't belong. You were brought to this world by people that don't care for you and you are thrown into a world of pain and suffering, and tears and hunger" are an important part of the story. He adds that "it's an amazing book written by a teenage girl. It's mind-blowing." Professor of philosophy Patricia MacCormack says that the Creature addresses the most fundamental human questions: "It's the idea of asking your maker what your purpose is. Why are we here, what can we do?"
On 5 November 2019, BBC News included Frankenstein in its list of the 100 most influential novels. In 2018, Jersey Post released series of 8 stamps celebrating the 200th anniversary of Frankenstein. In 2021 it was one of six classic science fiction novels by British authors selected by Royal Mail to be featured on a series of UK postage stamps.
Films, plays, and television
Main articles: Frankenstein in popular culture and List of films featuring Frankenstein's monsterThe 1931 film, with Boris Karloff playing the monster, is considered the most prominent portrayal of Frankenstein.
See also
- Frankenstein authorship question
- Frankenstein argument
- Frankenstein complex
- Frankenstein in Baghdad
- Frankenstein in popular culture
- Frankenstein's Promethean dimension
- Golem
- Gothic (film)
- Gothic aspects in Frankenstein
- Homunculus
- John Murray Spear
- List of works based on dreams
Notes
References
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- In the best-known versions of the Prometheus story, by Hesiod and Aeschylus, Prometheus merely brings fire to humankind, but in other versions, such as several of Aesop's fables (See in particular Fable 516), Sappho (Fragment 207), and Ovid's Metamorphoses, Prometheus is the actual creator of humanity.
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She began that novel as Mary Godwin in June 1816 when she was eighteen years old, she finished it as Mary Shelley in April/May 1817 when she was nineteen . . . and she published it anonymously on 1 January 1818 when she was twenty.
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- Mellor, Anne K. Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters. New York: Methuen, 1988.
- Michaud, Nicolas, Frankenstein and Philosophy: The Shocking Truth, Chicago: Open Court, 2013.
- Miles, Robert. Gothic Writing 1750–1820: A Genealogy. London: Routledge, 1993.
- Milner, Andrew. Literature, Culture and Society. London: Routledge, 2005, ch.5.
- O'Flinn, Paul. "Production and Reproduction: The Case of Frankenstein". Literature and History 9.2 (1983): 194–213.
- Poovey, Mary. The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer: Ideology as Style in the Works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley, and Jane Austen. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984.
- Rauch, Alan. "The Monstrous Body of Knowledge in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein". Studies in Romanticism 34.2 (1995): 227–53.
- Selbanev, Xtopher. "Natural Philosophy of the Soul", Western Press, 1999.
- Schor, Esther, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Mary Shelley. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
- Scott, Grant F. (April–June 2012). "Victor's Secret: Queer Gothic in Lynd Ward's Illustrations to Frankenstein (1934)". Word & Image. 28 (2): 206–32. doi:10.1080/02666286.2012.687545. S2CID 154238300.
- Smith, Johanna M., ed. Frankenstein. Case Studies in Contemporary Criticism. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 1992.
- Spark, Muriel. Mary Shelley. London: Cardinal, 1987. ISBN 0-7474-0318-X.
- Stableford, Brian. "Frankenstein and the Origins of Science Fiction". Anticipations: Essays on Early Science Fiction and Its Precursors. Ed. David Seed. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1995.
- Sunstein, Emily W. Mary Shelley: Romance and Reality. 1989. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991. ISBN 0-8018-4218-2.
- Tropp, Martin. Mary Shelley's Monster. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1976.
- Veeder, William. Mary Shelley & Frankenstein: The Fate of Androgyny. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986.
- Williams, Anne. The Art of Darkness: A Poetics of Gothic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.
Further reading
- Holmes, Richard (21 December 2017). "Out of Control". The New York Review of Books. Archived from the original on 14 December 2017. Retrieved 29 December 2024.
After two hundred years, how exactly are we to go back to Mary Shelley's 'Frankenstein' itself, as distinct from its proliferating, multimedia myth?
, review of:
- Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, Or, The Modern Prometheus: Annotated for Scientists, Engineers, and Creators of All Kinds, edited by David H. Guston, Ed Finn, and Jason Scott Robert, MIT Press, 277 pp.
- Mary Shelley, The New Annotated Frankenstein, edited and with a foreword and notes by Leslie S. Klinger, Liveright, 352 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXIV, no. 20 (21 December 2017), pp. 38, 40–41.
Editions
1818 text
- Shelley, Mary Frankenstein: 1818 text (Oxford University Press, 2009). Edited with an introduction and notes by Marilyn Butler.
- Shelley, Mary Frankenstein: The 1818 Text (Penguin Books, 2018). Edited with an introduction by Charlotte Gordon.
- Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, Or, The Modern Prometheus: Annotated for Scientists, Engineers, and Creators of All Kinds, edited by David H. Guston, Ed Finn, and Jason Scott Robert, MIT Press, 277 pp. doi:10.7551/mitpress/10815.001.0001
1831 text
- Fairclough, Peter (ed.) Three Gothic Novels: Walpole / Castle of Otranto, Beckford / Vathek, Mary Shelley / Frankenstein (Penguin English Library, 1968). With an introductory essay by Mario Praz.
- Shelley, Mary Frankenstein (Oxford University Press, 2008). Edited with an introduction and notes by M. K. Joseph.
Differences between 1818 and 1831 text
Shelley made several alterations in the 1831 edition including:
- The epigraph from Milton's Paradise Lost found in the 1818 original has been removed.
- Chapter one is expanded and split into two chapters.
- Elizabeth's origin is changed from Victor's cousin to being an orphan.
- Victor is portrayed more sympathetically in the original text. In the 1831 edition however, Shelley is critical of his decisions and actions.
- Shelley removed many references to scientific ideas which were popular around the time she wrote the 1818 edition of the book.
- Characters in the 1831 version have some dialogue removed entirely while others receive new dialogue.
External links
- Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley: Chronology and Resources at Romantic Circles
- "Frankenstein: a hypertext resource". English Department. University of Saskatchewan.
- Frankenstein at SparkNotes
Editions
- Frankenstein 1818 edition at Project Gutenberg
- Frankenstein 1831 edition at Project Gutenberg
- Frankenstein at Romantic Circles
- online texts of 1818 and 1831 editions and copious annotations
- Frankenstein public domain audiobook at LibriVox
- Frankenstein at Standard Ebooks
Sources
- Shelley's notebooks with her handwritten draft of Frankenstein
- Volume one Archived 10 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine
- Volume two Archived 30 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine
Reception
- On Frankenstein, a review by Percy Bysshe Shelley
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