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53641
Gothic
Description
Frankenstein Mind Map on Gothic, created by bookluvr on 22/04/2013.
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frankenstein
frankenstein
Mind Map by
bookluvr
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
bookluvr
over 11 years ago
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Resource summary
Gothic
Difference with realism:
Epistolary form is needed to add some element of realism: without something to bind it to real life, there is nothing to make the story seem plausible
David Lodge: "a fictional letter is indistinguishable to a real letter"
What is it for
Key aspects
Setting of oppressive ruin, "barren", wild landscape in a European Country
definately does this, set in Switzerland and England, however travelling to the ends of the earth by the end
nothing could be more barren than the North Pole, no where farther away from civilisation or bereft of life
Heroine with "trembling sensitivity"
Shelley breaks gothic convention before gothic genre has come to light, reflecting gothic genre of breaking conventions
Victor as gay, not able to write about that at the time, taboo
monster, outcast of society, is not only much more romantic/sexually aware and emotionally than Victor, but also more human
reflection on something LOOK AT MORE
CONTEXT by writing, Shelley is breaking conventions of the time etc, woman writing encouraged by her husband but always second place to him
gothic was a way to tackle issues with her own life, delving into her own 'dark psyche', issues with her mother dying, leaving her family for a man wh
o didnt love her, didnt care for her - trying to justify herself next to him
also, being exposed to a lot of scientific discoveries from her father made her very interested in it all, but unable to express herself as a woman
gothic gave her a chance to delve into the depths of everything, from questions of morality from French Revolution, to her questions about the world
tyrannical old man
Victor is ALSO the tyrranical man
doppelganger, personality doubling, being both hero(ine) and antagonist
monster is tyrranical, lurking around edges, never sure when it will appear
gothic terror in lead up to moment ie marriage night with elizabeth, Alps, Orkneys etc
contemplates the rape of Justine
doppelganger
Victor and the Monster
Victor and Walton
Victor and Justine
D'Lacys and Frankensteins
Elizabeth and female creature
neither has marriage consummated
connotations of incest
Elizabeth and Frankenstein were originally first cousins, but was changed to make them unrelated
Victor's dream about his mother
poisonous effects of guilt
Victor's actions haunt him, causing his complete ostracizaton from humanity, in the end
persecuted by creature to lose everything he loves
HOWEVER feels guilt for the wrong reasons, he feels he caused the death of those dearest to him, and released a monster into the world
guilt SHOULD be felt for leaving creature, his first feeling one of abandonement, alone in the world, with no one to love him
nature vs nurture, was the monster predominantly evil, or did he grow to be that way through the actions of Victor?
JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU
"man is born free and everywhere he is in chains"
Rousseau said that man was born with two instincts: self preservation and compassion. Basically, man is born good, and it is civiliation that corrupts
"If our impulses were confined to hunger, thirst and desire, we might nearly be free" Chp 10
Shelley used three of his fundamental beliefs: that man is most content in the state of nature, society is what corrupts him, and once corrupted
he can never return to his natural state
"Oh, that I had for ever remained in my native wood, nor known nor felt beyond the sensations of hunger, thirst and heat!" Chp 13
"Of what a strange nature is knowledge! It clings to the mind, when it has once seized on it, like a lichen on a rock" Chp 13
Rousseau believed that it was man's enslavement to his own needs that was responsible for most societal downfalls, from exploitation to depression
unspeakable thoughts, an inability to express the horror of his actions, no language to express such horror, not even gothic
cannot speak to anyone about his actions, estranged from society
also Romantic convention, believing no one could possibly understand the depth of their feelings, too close to godliness in their sublime thoughts
language of excess
"One of the principal horrors lurking throughout Gothic Fiction is the sense that there is no exit from the darkly illuminating labyrinth of language"
Fred Botting, Gothic
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