Frankenstein
Frankenstein, a novel by Mary Shelley, 1818
- also called The Modern Prometheus
Mary Shelley[edit | edit source]
- her mother was the famed writer and women's rights thinker, Mary Wollenstonecraft
- Wollenstonecraft is considered the "first feminist"
- her father, '''William Godwin''', was a famous political philosopher and novelist
- Godwin was considered a political radical for his attacks on institutions, "aristocratic privilege", and religion
- he argued
- he was an early promoter of "utilitarianism," a philosophy that sought to create the "greatest good" or "happiness" for the "greatest number of people"
- Godwin wrote a novel that drew from John Milton's "Paradise Lost"
- Mary Shelley also drew inspiration from ''Paradise Lost''
- Godwin was considered a political radical for his attacks on institutions, "aristocratic privilege", and religion
- Shelley had an affair with the poet Percy Shelley, who was married, and married him in 1816
Writing of Frankenstein[edit | edit source]
The Year Without a Summer[edit | edit source]
- it was on a trip to Switzerland in 1816 w/ Shelley, the poet Lord Byron, and William Polidor that Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein
- Mary wrote of her time in Switzerland,
"It proved a wet, ungenial summer, and incessant rain often confined us for days to the house"
- there were unusual, frequent thunderstorms that summer
- in 1815, Mt. Tombora, in Indonesia, had exploded, the largest volcanic eruption in 1,300 years
- the volcano emitted an enormous amount of ash and particles into the sky
- caused agricultural disasters and famines across the northern hemisphere
- the summer of 1816 was known as "The Year Without a Summer"
- worldwide temperatures dropped 1 degree Celsius
- in Switzerland ice formed in the mountains during the summer and reddish snow fell during the summer in the Alps regions of northern Italy (bordering Switzerland)
- and rain across Europe flooded major rivers
- in Hungry, the volcanic ash mixed with snow and fell as "brown snow"
- during the gloomy summer, to amuse one another, the friends told ghost stories to one another
- Byron suggested they each write one of their own
- Mary was unable to think of one, until her thoughts moved towards "galvanism" and the re-animation of a corpse.
Galvanism[edit | edit source]
- Benjamin Franklin's discoveries in the mid-1700s of the nature of lightning as electricity spurred research into electricity
- in the late 1700s, Luigi Galvani realized that muscle tissue reacted to electricity
- his assistant accidently touched a dead frog's leg with a charged scalpel, which made its leg move
- Galvani later realized that electricity produced the same effect
- he proposed that electricity animated living things
- he called it "animal electricity"
- became known as "Galvanism"
- became a cultural phenomenon (meme)
- cartoons and stories of corpses raised from the dead with electricity
- the term "Galvanism" was actually coined by Alessandro Volta, who built the first chemical electric battery
- for Volta, "Galvanism" referred to generation of electricity via chemical reactions
- James Lind, 1736-1812
- a physician who taught Galvanism and demonstrated it to Percy Shelley with dead frogs and reptiles by making them jump by applying electricity
- he suggested the use of electricity to treat the insane (called today "electroshock therapy")
- and he may have revived a cardiac arrest patient with electrical shocks
- Mary Shelley had nightmares about these sessions
- Lind was likely the inspiration for the characters De Lacey and Dr. M. Waldman in Frankenstein.
- a physician who taught Galvanism and demonstrated it to Percy Shelley with dead frogs and reptiles by making them jump by applying electricity
Technological change[edit | edit source]
- during the early 19th century, the world saw tremendous technological and scientific change and advance
- new technologies and inventions excited and scared the world
- religion was challenged as the sole explanation of the natural world
exploration[edit | edit source]
- the world was first circumnavigated in the 1500s
- a part of northern Australia was only discovered in 1606 by the Dutch, who never settled it
- the British mapped and settled Australia in the 1780s after losing the American colonies
- explorers were still mapping the Arctics in the late 1700s
electricity[edit | edit source]
- in the 1740s and 1750s Benjamin Franklin astounded the world by discovering the nature of electricity and lightning
- other scientists and inventors studied and experimented with electricity
steam engine[edit | edit source]
- the first steam engine was invented in the mid-1700s
- the first steam boats were employed in the late 1700s
- the first steam-powered land vehicles (trains and tractors) were used in the early 1800s
medicine[edit | edit source]
- along w/ the telescope, the microscope was invented over a long period of time
- in 1676, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
Science, knowledge & acting like God[edit | edit source]
- the overall theme of Frankenstein is the danger of knowledge
- "science" originally means "knowledge" or "acquiring knowledge"
- thus "science" is taking on knowledge
- the novel poses questions about Dr. Frankenstein's experiments and about science itsefl:
- was he trying to gain knowledge that he should not possess?
- was he acting like a god or God?
- is there such as thing as "dangerous knowledge"
- should there be limits upon scientific experiments?
Literary, mythological & religious inspirations and references[edit | edit source]
Adam and Eve[edit | edit source]
- in the Hebrew bible (Christian "Old Testament"), God created man in the form of Adam and Eve
- they were to live in peace with God and all the animals in the "Garden of Eden"
- the only rule was that they should not eat the fruit of the "tree of knowledge"
- Satan (the devil) appeared to them as a serpent (snake)
- and convinced Eve that God was unfair and cruel to not let them eat from the "tree of knowledge"
- and that they could become like God if they ate the fruit of that tree
- by eating the fruit, they lost their innocence and were kicked out of the Garden of Eden for it
- while God created Adam and Eve, is God responsible for their decisions?
- or do Adam and Eve exercise free will (make decisions on their own)?
- or is He?
- or do Adam and Eve exercise free will (make decisions on their own)?
Paradise Lost[edit | edit source]
- by the English poet, John Milton
- tells the Biblical stories of
- the fall of Satan and other angels who are banished from Heaven for rebelling against God
- the "fall of man" through the narrative of Adam and Eve and their "temptation" by Satan to eat the fruit from the tree of knowledge
Prometheus[edit | edit source]
- Frankenstein is also called, or sometimes uses the subtitle, "The Modern Prometheus"
- = Greek myth of "Prometheus"
- he was a Titan who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humans in order to help them
- = giving humans knowledge of the gods
- the gods were angered and punished Prometheus to eternal torment
- by being tied to a rock and having his liver eaten by an eagle every day
- then it would grow back to be eaten again the next day
- eventually the hero Heracles rescued him
Problems for Dr. Frankenstein[edit | edit source]
so a question for Dr. Frankenstein is if he is acting like God, the Greek gods, or Adam & Eve or Prometheus?
- if Dr. Frankenstein is acting like God, is Frankenstein responsible for the actions of the monster?
- if, instead, Dr. Frankenstein is acting like Adam and Eve or Prometheus, is he not then responsible for his actions, as he stole "knowledge" from God/gods?
- is some knowledge dangerous?
- should there be limits upon knowledge?
- is there responsibility with knowledge?