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Frankenstein Mary Shelley’s
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Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

FrankensteinMary Shelley’s

Page 2: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

The Modern Prometheus

Page 3: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Mary Shelley

While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening, Byron challenged his guests to each write their own ghost story. Mary's story became Frankenstein, which was inspired by a dream.

Page 4: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Her Inspiration

•Chemistry and electricity, which are new to society•Alchemists' search for the elixir of life •Is it possible to reanimate the bodies of the dead?

Page 5: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Galvanism

•1790s, Italian physician Luigi Galvani•Made frog muscles twitch by jolting them with a spark from an electrostatic machine. •The word galvanism implied the release of mysterious life forces through electricity.

Page 6: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Galvanism

Illustration of Italian physician Luigi Galvani's experiments, in which he applied electricity to frogs legs; from his book De Viribus Electricitatis in Motu Musculari (1792).

Page 7: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Galvanism

Electricity's seeming ability to stir the dead to life gave the word galvanize its own special flavoring, as this 1836 political cartoon of a "galvanized" corpse suggests.

Page 8: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Monster coming to life

https://www.gaggle.net/main.do#GaggleTube

Page 9: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Author’s Purpose

We are asked to confront:•human accountability•social alienation•the nature of life itself.

Page 10: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Frame Story

•search for something deep, dark, and secret at the heart of the narrative.• A different character narrates the events of a story in each frame.

**Robert Walton narrates through letters to his sister

**Frankenstein relates his story to Robert Walton.

**Frankenstein’s creature relates his own tale to his creator.

Page 11: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Frame Narrative in Frankenstein

Robert Walton’s Letters

Victor’s Story

Creature’s Story

Margaret Saville (Robert’s sister) is the recipient of the letters

Page 12: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Gothic Novel

Popular between 1760 and 1820 Includes mystery, horror, and

supernatural Gothic can mean:

harsh or cruel▪ Refers to the barbaric Gothic tribes of the

Middle Ages Medieval▪ Historical period associated with castles and

knights in armor

Page 13: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Setting

Late 1700’s

Europe Switzerlan

d, Germany, and Arctic

Page 14: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Victor Frankenstein

• Romantic hero• Passionate, uninhibited, unconventional• Often social rebel or outcast• Often isolate themselves in nature

• oldest son in Frankenstein family•Novel’s protagonist and narrator for most of novel•Thirst for knowledge and ambition from childhood•Prejudiced

Page 15: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

The monster

• The eight-foot-tall, hideously ugly•creation of Frankenstein• originally kind and sensitive•Wants to be loved and accepted•Judged by all as evil due to appearance

Page 16: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Robert Walton

• Arctic explorer whose letters open and close Frankenstein. •Rescues Victor Frankenstein from the ice, helps nurse him back to health, and hears Victor’s story.• He records the incredible tale in a series of letters addressed to his sister, Margaret Saville, in England.•Walton’s quest for knowledge is parallel to Victor’s search for enlightenment• Walton is the double of

Victor

Page 17: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Alphonse Frankenstein

• Victor’s father•Very sympathetic toward his son.• devoted husband and parent•Well-respected public magistrate•Believes in family and the good in society

Page 18: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Elizabeth Lavenza

•An orphan, four to five years younger than Victor, whom the Frankenstein's adopt.•Becomes Victor’s wife• Remains gorgeous, pure and passive throughout novel

Page 19: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Henry Clerval

•Victor’s childhood friend.•Vast imagination•Sensitive heart•Boundless love of nature• Victor’s “guiding light”•Selfless•Optimism contrasts Victor’s gloominess

Page 20: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

William Frankenstein

• Victor’s youngest brother and the darling of the Frankenstein family

Page 21: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Justine Moritz

• A young girl adopted at the age of 12 into the Frankenstein household.

Page 22: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Caroline Beaufort

•Victor’s mother•Idealized woman:• Smart• Kind• Generous• Resourceful

Page 23: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Other Characters

Beufort - close friend of Alphonse; becomes Victor’s grandfather

Cottage Family – a family of peasants living in exile De Lacey – blind old man Felix – son and Agatha – daughter Safie – foreign woman in love with Felix

M. Waldman – chemistry professor; Victor’s mentor

M. Krempe – professor of natural philosophy; calls Victor’s studies “nonsense”

Mr. Kirwin – Irish magistrate

Page 24: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Themes

Alienation- a sense of not belonging, either to a community or to one's own sense of self.Romanticism and Nature - a crucial term in Romantic writers. Seen as greatest and most perfect force in the universe. Ambition and Fallibility – although human beings can be deeply ambitious, they can also be deeply flawed.Revenge – humanities need to seek retribution for being wronged.Prejudice – mankind’s most persistent and destructive flaws. Exhibited by nearly every human character.

Page 25: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Symbols

Light - enlightenmentFire – dangerous force used for sustenance and punishment

Page 26: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Letter 1

From Robert Walton to his sister Margaret Saville. Walton is the captain of a ship headed on a voyage to the North Pole, looking for a northern passage to the Pacific, revealing the source of the Earth’s magnetism, or setting foot on undiscovered territory.

Page 27: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Letter 2-3

Walton feels lonely and too smart to have conversations with his shipmates. His ship sets sail in letter 3.

Page 28: Mary Shelley’s. While visiting the poet Lord Byron at his villa beside Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the weather frequently forced them indoors. One evening,

Letter 4

Ship stalls and they spot a gigantic creature guiding a sledge. The next morning they find a weak starving man who refuses to board the ship until Walton tells him he is heading north. Walton and the stranger become friends and the stranger agrees to tell Walton his story. Walton’s frame ends and the stranger’s begins.