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Summary Frankenstein Ultimate Notes - quotes and themes

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A detailed document compiled over 2 years. Analysing techniques, allusions, characters, quotes and themes. Perfect for essay planning and understanding the gothic novel as a whole.

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  • June 18, 2024
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  • 2023/2024
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Frankenstein Ultimate Notes
 Shelley creates a novel which explores ideas of galvanism, feminism, and
religion.
 Potentially modelling the main character, Victor, on her husband Percy
Shelley; Victor is presented as ambitious, striving for knowledge,
egotistical, superstitious, and neglectful.
 Shelley’s novel is potentially autobiographical, using the novel to portray
her marital frustrations through the similarities of Victor and Percy. Other
correlations include: ‘motherless child’- Mary and the creature, ‘father
rejecting child’- Mary and the creature, ‘university student conducting
experiments’- Percy did this, could assume the Frankenstein family is
modelled on Mary’s family
 The 1818 version presents Victor as a victim of his own ambition, in
1831 this is changed to Victor being a victim of fate
 Originally published anonymously – therefore Percy was regarded as the
main author
 Removed the epigraph from John Milton of ‘Paradise Lost’ - distancing
the story from religion
 ‘Glut the maw of death’ - heavily inspired by Milton
 in German, the name Frankenstein translates to “stronghold of
freemen’’
 Authorial intention
 The novel does not condemn science – but rather condemns mankind
 A mixture of genres - science fiction, gothic, romantic, tragedy
 The novel may have started with the aim of Gothicism but grows
into a plethora of other genres as an allegory for warning mankind of
its own nature
 Does not include the fear of science – non science fiction
conventions
 Alternate readings
 The creature does not exist – is simply a doppelganger and victor
commits all of the monster’s crimes
Mary and the creature:
 Lack of mother figure
 Lack of supportive father
 Was forced to educate themselves
Percy and Victor:

,  Both narcissistic
 Both unfaithful
 Lack of good parental skills
 Interest in science- chemistry and galvanism
 1831 second edition views Victor more softly, potentially represents the
softening of Mary’s frustration with her then deceased husband
Frankenstein features influence from the following themes/ideologies of her
time: alchemy, galvanism, limits of human knowledge, gothic horror genre,
romanticism
Feminism:
 The female characters are almost always docile and subservient
 The book in total presents the dangers of procreation without women
 Women fulfilling their roles in society


Context:
 Influences from romanticism from Percy- the creature signifies the
dangers of industrialisation and science
 Romanticism- looked at a new way of alternate and ‘old style’ living, a
new of perceiving nature and the world, despised the industrial
revolution, believed adult inspiration stemmed from childhood
experiences, believed childhood itself was being destroyed by
industrialisation
 Mentions of loss- which Mary experienced a lot in her life – lost mum, 3
lost children, two suicides,
 Her mother Mary Wollstonecraft who campaigned for women’s rights
and wrote ‘Vindication for the rights of women’- Mary presents feminist
themes in the book through the absence and character of female
characters
 Her father William Godwin and his radicalistic views on society –
founder of philosophical anarchism – believed that knowledge would
overcome the government
 The significance of religion and Christianity at the time, some critics
thought Shelley was wrong to not demonise Victor for ‘playing God’
 Exploration – influence on Walton’s expedition
 Utilitarianism
 Enlightenment – rejection of science and structural control – Shelley's
influence from parents

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