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Frankenstein's Promethean dimension

As the story of Mary Shelley's 1818 novel Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus recounts the making of a kind of human being. The title references Prometheus, a titan in Greek mythology who brought fire to humanity.

Frontispiece from the 1831 edition.

The title of the novel echoes the call of the French materialist philosopher, La Mettrie (1709-1751), in 1747, in his Homme machine, for the advent of a "new Prometheus" who would set in motion a reconstituted human machine.[1][N 1]

Mary Shelley did not invent the expression, which had already been used in the early 18th century and, closer to its end, by Immanuel Kant,[2] and Frankenstein goes far beyond the technical substratum, presenting, in addition to its borrowings from myth, metaphysical, aesthetic and ethical aspects.[3]

Mythological influences edit

 
Félicité de Genlis by Lemoine.

Frankenstein tells the story of a man seeking to surpass his condition, akin to that of Icarus, the bird-man destroyed by the physical order of the universe.[4] It also evokes the more recent eighteenth-century Faust,[5] thirsting for knowledge beyond the limits assigned to Man, even if only by time: Faust must give an account on the appointed date, abandoning his soul to the forces of evil. Mary Shelley refers to the Faustian idea that knowledge intoxicates the soul and proves dangerous when it becomes excessive, becoming in itself "a serpent's bite".[6] The novel also contains hints of Don Juanism: the hero's quest is never satisfied and, like the statue of the commander,[7] the monster appears and precipitates Frankenstein into the bowels of a psychological hell,[8] whose fire is the "bite" of glaciation. Frankenstein also evokes Pygmalion,[6] king of Cyprus and a sculptor in love with the statue of a woman he has just completed, a new Galatea of flesh and blood after Aphrodite breathes life into her.[9] The latter myth was known to Mary Shelley, who had read it first and foremost in the Nouveaux contes moraux et nouvelles historiques, published by Madame de Genlis in 1802,[10][11] then in John Dryden's translation, again published in 1810,[12][N 2] and which she also knew from Rameau's Pigmalion (1748),[N 3] reductions of which for fortepiano were circulating throughout Europe.[13]

References to the original Prometheus myth edit

 
Prometheus by Eduard Müller (1828-1895).

Mary Shelley first refers to the Greek myth of Prometheus, struggling against the omnipotence of Zeus, stealing fire from Olympus and bringing it to mankind to help and save them. In this version of the myth, the rebellious Titan intends to break human destiny by giving them the primary element of energy, and thus of technology, as well as a symbol of Knowledge. He is Prometheus Pyrophoros, the bearer, transporter and provider of fire. This Prometheus, whose name means "Provider", sees beyond the human condition, which he befriends. As a Titan, he enjoys immortality, and his punishment, according to Aeschylus, is to be chained to Mount Caucasus in India and tortured by the eagle, which gnaws away at his liver every day, regenerating it at night. Byron also wrote his Prometheus,[14][15] but the work whose gestation and genesis Mary Shelley was at least able to know,[16] for it was written after Frankenstein between 1818 and 1819, was her lover, then husband, Percy Bysshe Shelley's Prometheus Unbound, a four-act play depicting the Titan, more or less mingled with the Lucifer of Milton's Paradise Lost, a champion of moral and humanitarian virtues, frankly freed from the yoke of Jupiter and heralding the liberation of mankind.[17]

In many ways, however, it is a departure from the Prometheus Unbound, which combines the liberation of the rebellious hero with the downfall of a cruel god, the principle and symbol of evil.[3] The catastrophe takes on cosmic proportions, and the hopes of the modern soul are focused on the advent of a new universe.[18] Shelley's stubborn belief in the ultimate triumph of love and the avenue of the Golden Age[N 4] is fulfilled in the victory over Evil of a hero free of all taint and entirely worthy of representing the Good.[19] Purified by suffering, inhabited by humility and mansuétude, disavowing his ancient pride and hatred, he becomes on his rock a figure of Christ on the cross. His deliverance implies the fall of Jupiter, which is precisely the birth of the Golden Age.[20]

The only thing Shelley's Prometheus Unbound and his wife's Frankenstein have in common, then, is the act of transgression - beneficial in one, evil in the other, responsible in the former, irresponsible in the latter.[20]

Only a few elements in Frankenstein recall this first version of the myth. First of all, the ambition shared by Walton, Frankenstein and even the monster in the central episode of the De Lacey family, to help mankind.[21] Walton hopes to discover a hidden paradise beyond the polar ice caps; Frankenstein claims to conquer death and improve the human race; the monster provides the De Laceys with firewood: here, in grotesque miniature - for while he possesses the Titan's power, he lacks its mighty beauty - is a vignette reproducing exactly the main gesture of the myth, that of providing man with fire.[21] The second element is fire itself, the symbolism of which runs through the novel: the fire-energy of the storm that strikes down the old oak;[22] the fire that is stolen and then lost, giving warmth, light and nourishment; the destructive fire that sets the cottage ablaze; the fire of the pyre or of Hell, or the purifying fire that, as the book promises, will forever consume the monster itself, a morbid emanation of Victor's pseudo-creative imagination. The third point is undoubtedly the allegory of the chained Titan's suffering:[23] such is Victor's mortifying despair, walled in by his silence and pain; such is also the absolute solitude of the monster rejected by his creator and the common man,[N 5] deprived of his feminine complement;[23] such is finally, albeit to a lesser degree, the growing anxiety which, little by little, undermines the youthful and initially conquering enthusiasm of Robert Walton,[24] alienated from his family, his crew and the commerce of men.[25]

References to Ovid's Prometheus edit

 
Ovid's Metamorphoses, English edition of 1567.

Mary Shelley then borrows from the Prometheus of Ovid's Metamorphoses,[26] in which the Titan, rather than coming to man's aid, usurps the power of the gods, then fabricates man and confers on him, through manipulations of "ethereal energy", the most mysterious and sacred of goods - life. He is the Prometheus Pyrophoros et plasticator,[27] i.e. the thief of fire, then the shaper, the craftsman who transforms clay into man. Beyond the original meaning of Ovid's title, for there is more to it than a "change of form" (Meta-morphoses: In noua fert animus mutatas dicere formas / Corpora),[28] this is an act of creation, but with a technique, materials and energy.[29]

It was from Ovid's Prometheus that Mary Shelley drew both the idea of a living humanoid and the method for breathing life into it.[30] What was the work of a Titan became that of a mortal, but one intoxicated by science to the point of believing in his own immortality. Like the Titan, he uses know-how, in this case acquired through study, particularly of the so-called natural sciences, physics and chemistry.[31] Like the Titan too, he is seized (numbed) by a feverish enthusiasm for his decision, the accomplishment of his work, the final technical act conferring the spark of life. The "energy of the ether" was replaced, in a period of scientific discovery, by what Victor's intuition first called "particles of celestial fire", then what his knowledge enabled him to identify as "the galvanizing use of electricity".[32][33] He succeeded in what the scientists of the time hoped one day to achieve, in fact the old foolish dream of the alchemists; the idea, the imagination, the enthusiasm, it was first Cornelius Agrippa[34] and Paracelsus,[35][36] then more rationally, Professor Waldman, no doubt inspired Mary Shelley by Humphry Davy,[37][38] writing in 1816: "science has conferred on him [man] powers that might almost be called creative [...] to interrogate nature [...] in mastery [...], and to penetrate its deepest secrets"; fiction erases Humphry Davy's "almost" and takes the plunge.[31][N 6][39][40] There is thus a very modern dimension to Mary Shelley's use of this Prometheus as metamorphoser, creator, artist-craftsman.[31] Like the Titan, Victor uses clay (the living having returned to dust) and shapes it into a living being. The being had returned to nothingness, and from nothing, he promotes it back to being, in an act that is above all scientific: imagination has joined forces with experimentation, equipping itself with new techniques, the scientist is the new Prometheus, dominating hero, master of the world.[41] In this respect, Frankenstein raises questions that are still relevant today: science can destroy man, but it can also modify, use and manipulate him.[42] The fact that this Prometheus poses the problem of his power implies, de facto, that alongside cognitive awareness, moral awareness must intervene to avoid not only the "ruin of the soul"[N 7] but also that of man himself.[31]

Borrowings from John Milton and Samuel Taylor Coleridge edit

 
Satan expelled from Heaven, by Gustave Doré.

In addition to these two versions of the Prometheus myth, there are borrowings from Milton's Paradise Lost,[43] often mentioned in the Shelleys' diaries,[44] particularly when William Godwin published his work on the poet's nephews,[45] and from Coleridge's poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.[29]

Like Milton's Satan,[29] Mary Shelley's modern Prometheus has rebelled against the divine order, that is, against God himself;[10] like Milton's God, Victor abandons his creature;[46] like Satan,[29] Victor and his creature express their loneliness and despair;[47] like Satan too, the monster suffers but does not submit, deciding in the end to choose Evil; like Milton's Adam, finally, he reproaches his creator for having taken him from the earth to make human clay.[N 8][48][49]

 
Illustration of Coleridge's poem by Gustave Doré.

Like Coleridge's sailor, Victor has destroyed the divine order and has remained abandoned by God,[50] solitary, deprived of certainties, on icy continents in the image of the glaciation from which his soul suffers.[51] However, he will not be saved: the exorcism of his story will not save him from physical death, the last avatar of the death of his being that occurred when he gave life to the monster; he would thus have placed his own life in a hideous body,[23] because, since the application of the "instruments of life", he will not cease to decay before perishing altogether.[52] Likewise, and in this respect similar to his creator, also abandoned by his god, the monster finds himself isolated in a universe whose harmony he perceives but cannot share. So he puts his body in unison with his soul and entrusts it to the inaccessible peaks and icy deserts that respond to the coldness of his heart, dragging along his pursuer, who is no longer sure whether he is hunter or game.[52]

Metaphysical, aesthetic and ethical aspects edit

Transgression edit

 
Frankenstein manuscript.

The act of transgression exists, but is never qualified as such. The vocabulary used by Victor, who is not Mary Shelley's spokesman,[23] as he constructs his narrative by restructuring his life and putting it into perspective in the light of what he has retained from it, with its weaknesses, its emotional burdens, its weight of character, is limited to a semantics of research and discovery. Thus, he uses probe into, penetrate, explore, discover, etc. to describe the dynamics of his action, and hidden recesses, deep secrets, unknown territories, further knowledge, etc. to delimit the field of his hard work. Very rarely, a verb like trespass is used to indicate that the work goes beyond any norm.

If there is any judgment on the author's part, it's in the unfolding of the action and Frankenstein's psychological punishment,[24] rather than explicitly expressed by the successive narrator(s).[6] Only the monster is led, like Milton's Adam, to deplore the advent of an undesired life;[6] still, this is an existential misfortune that he endures, rather than an ontological refusal of accession to being.[53]

Transgression consists in the making of a being, then and above all in the act of giving it life.[23]

Creation edit

The creation itself is presented as based on abnormality.[23] The monster's body is a mass of dead flesh and animal flesh. Admittedly, the process responds to a possibility evoked by certain eighteenth-century scientists; however, there is a desacralization of the human being, a corruption of his integrity, a defilement of his purity,[8] all in the light of a Judeo-Christian vision of Man. Mary Shelley does not refer to it explicitly, but the socio-cultural context of the action presupposes its existence as an integral part of the collective consciousness. A dead body can only be resurrected by the One who created it, and animal flesh is not in the image of God. At the beginning of the 19th century, the state of science rejected the possibility on the horizon of the inconceivable; this is therefore an extreme example, a kind of symbol of transgression.[23]

The gift of life edit

 
Portrait of Luigi Galvani (1737-1798)

Even when galvanized by electricity, this gift of life seems to run up against a fundamental impossibility, as it's a question of passing from nothingness to being. On the other hand, the monster does not remain in a vegetative state, but proves to be endowed with a cognitive and moral consciousness in every respect equal to that of man.[3] As far as the species is concerned, apart from its aesthetic aspect,[23] it is even superior to man, surpassing him in strength, mobility and agility. Without specifying to whom and to what the right to confer life belongs, Mary Shelley suggests that, in any case, it does not belong to man other than by natural transmission.[54]

Frankenstein, through its title, its overt and covert quotations, its allusions and vocabulary borrowings, refers to the myth of Prometheus, and then to Paradise Lost, one can conclude that the order it presents is above all divine. The act of transgression thus appears as a usurpation of the sacred, the exclusive province of divinity. However, in both cases, the presupposed god is domineering, jealous of his prerogatives, vengeful even, Olympian Zeus (or Jupiter), perhaps the God of the Old Testament.[23] The punishment will be extreme, in the image of the crime or sin: family, moral and physical destruction.[18]

However, the constant reference to the major poetic texts of Mary Shelley's contemporaries and friends - Wordsworth, Coleridge and, of course, Byron and Shelley - and the direct allusions to works such as Tintern Abbey, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage[25] and Mutability, which rest on a substratum of diffuse pantheism, would suggest that the divine order and the natural order merge.[18] One of the functions of nature in Frankenstein is to suggest, if only on a sensory and perceptual level, the presence of transcendence - harmony in the Rhine valley, sovereign grandeur atop the Alpine peaks, infinity and eternity on the icy oceans.[55]

The sublime edit

The sublime according to Burke edit

 
Edmund Burke.

As explained by Edmund Burke in 1757, it is based on astonishment,[56] and to a lesser degree, admiration and reverence, all notions, in fact, by-products of terror (see, according to Burke, the Latin words stupeo or attonitus).[N 9] The ingredients are darkness, power.[57][58]

A few quotations from Burke help to understand this aspect:

"Whatever is fitted in any sort to excite the ideas of pain and danger, that is to say, whatever is in any sort terrible, or is conversant about terrible objects, or operates in a manner analogous to terror, is a source of the sublime"[57][59]

"Whatever […] is terrible, with regard to sight, is sublime too"[60]

"Greatly night adds to our dread […] Almost all the heathen temples were dark […] The druids performed all the ceremonies in the bosom of the darkest woods {…} No person seems better to have understood the secret of heightening, or of setting terrible things, if I may use the expression, in their strongest light by the force of a judicious obscurity than Milton."[61]

"To make any thing very terrible, obscurity seems in general to be necessary."[61]

"I know of nothing sublime which is not some modification of power"[57]

"[…] strength, violence, pain and terror, are ideas that rush in upon the mind together"[57]

Mary Shelley's use of the sublime edit

 
Wanderer above the Sea of Fog (1817) by Caspar David Friedrich.

Mary Shelley uses the ingredients analyzed or simply listed by Burke to associate Victor Frankenstein's transgression with the notion of the sublime, either to make him describe his states of mind, whether inhabited by torment or exaltation,[62] or to create the illusion that landscapes impose notions of greatness and disquiet, elevation or unease[56] (steep valleys, dark forests, etc.), or simply to arouse a gothic terror (or, in the first part, horror) in the reader. The monster, too, is sublime in its conception (obscurity, isolation), its size (out of the ordinary and frightening), the places it chooses and imposes on Victor (forests, peaks, valleys, abysses, vast deserts, tumultuous or frozen oceans), the unspeakable absoluteness of its solitude, the extremity of its feelings, the unpredictability of its character,[56] its alliance with the elements (storms, glaciers, darkness, earth, water, fire).[62]

For the sublime also lies within human beings. Like a natural landscape, the panorama of the soul arouses astonishment, admiration and respect, or else, by opposition or default, sinks into ridicule (ludicrous, according to Burke).[63] Soon, the inner landscape becomes nocturnal, on the edge of consciousness, a dark, convulsive, spasmodic turmoil; through a play of mirrors reminiscent of the nested, reflective structure, the monster to which Victor has nevertheless given life becomes the very projection of his death wish. The transgression has been placed under the sign of Thanatos: the monster is the negative double of his creator,[64] his evil Doppelgänger[65] who carries out the death sentence unconsciously pronounced by Victor[24] on his family, his friend, his wife, whom he believes he adores but whom he has experienced as castrating, suffocating him with love, protection, moral comfort and social certainties.[18]

The being torn apart by suffering is also a divided being, in turn and at the same time creator and destroyer, provider of life and death, hunter and prey, executioner and victim.[54] The abject monster turns out to be sublime, and the creator thought to be sublime turns out to be abject.[66] This necessarily leads to an escape:[3] the escape of the characters, who find each other only to lose each other, the escape of Victor, then of the monster, the pursuit of one by the other, then of the other by the one, quests as ardent as they are senseless, Walton's, Victor's ("ardour that exceeded moderation"), the monster's ("dream of bliss that cannot be realized"), leading to nothingness.[24] Walton fails to reach the continent of happiness; Victor destroys his loved ones by procuration before destroying himself; the monster immolates himself with the fire that promoted him to being. The quest remains nothing more than a sterile, frozen quest; the fruits have not "kept the promise of the flowers".[N 10][67]

Morality edit

The story is never told by a heterodiegetic narrator. Successive layers of first-person narration are superimposed by the echoes left in the various listeners and the reader.[68] None of the three narrators is Mary Shelley's spokesperson, at least not unreservedly. She entrusts each with words, and therefore character traits, principles, actions, feelings and emotions that she seems to approve of, and others that she rejects.[24] The good and the not-so-good, the evil and the not-so-evil are all mixed up to varying degrees, and the author uses a range of devices, albeit rather limited and rather stereotyped, to let her degree of sympathy, aversion or amused contempt shine through. At times, she approaches the narrators - who are never protagonists in the raw, since all actions belong to the past and are filtered through a network of successive consciousnesses - only to distance herself from them in a constant game of hide-and-seek, swaying to the whim of her irony.[24]

This explains why the author sometimes seems to be moving in the direction of Walton's romantic enthusiasm, or even Frankenstein's, and at other times to be completely detached from it.[24]

A paroxysmal oscillation edit

 
Percy Bysshe Shelley, by Alfred Clint, based on Amelia Curran.

All the more so, in fact, as this character's oscillation between euphoria and prostration is pushed to the extreme. Admittedly, this is a kind of stark representation of the romantic hero,[69] but through the repetition of attacks and crises, the portrait of a character that psychiatry would call bipolar gradually emerges, rather unlike his creator. Indeed, as far as we know, and despite the tumultuous effervescence of her household, Mary cultivated the memory of her husband and was concerned with his work, but in a way that erased much of its radicalism, and she always sought to establish a compromise between her fidelity and her condition as a woman, the offspring of a famous family, the widow of a poet of genius, evolving in a non-conformist medium, but a woman all the same in a society reluctant to accept feminist outbursts.[70]

This is how the reader could be taken in by Victor Frankenstein's contradictory statements, and find in them a vacillating ambiguity of Mary Shelley's ethical conceptions.[23] His acts of contrition are easily contrasted, as adisplayed at the beginning of his story, with, for example, the fiery heroic-comic speech he addresses to Walton's sailors, in which he enjoins upon them the firmness of a grand design and the duty of heroism. The exhortation is peppered with ironic nods to William Shakespeare, including the young Henry V's speech to his soldiers, St Crispin's Day,[71] and a disguised quotation from The Tempest in the line "This is not made of such stuff as your hearts may be", parodying the lines "We are such stuff / As dreams are made on, and our little life. Is rounded with a sleep", spoken by Prospero.[72] Then she's framed by bouts of deep despondency (sunk in languor); only Walton, captivated by the character, falls under her spell: "a voice so modulated", "an eye so full of lofty design and heroism".

A response through action edit

 
Immanuel Kant.

Mary Shelley's response to Frankenstein's transgression is to be found in the very unfolding of the action. Frankenstein is, among other things, a matter of crime and punishment,[3] the systematic destruction of his family's relational and moral fabric, the disintegration of his being through isolation, guilt, inner torture[29] and, ultimately, the extinction of life.[1] So to claim that the enterprise itself is not reprehensible is a sophism: the tragic personal consequences, the upheaval of institutions, the absurd operation of justice,[25] which condemns on the basis of appearances,[73] are the result of flawed premises. The quest was evil, and the Grail a poisoned chalice.[74]

Insofar as the higher moral instance cannot be identified, since in many ways Frankenstein's world is a world without God,[23] it is appropriate to use the vocabulary of Kant's Critique of Practical Reason, known and appreciated by Coleridge, published in 1787, and simply evoke the presence of a categorical imperative. Here, the moral law exists, but one cannot know its origin, imposing itself rather than imposing it, and certainly not revealing it; it is: in his inspired but irresponsible adolescent dream,[75] Victor has consciously set it aside, and in the process, peace, happiness and life itself have slipped away from him.[54] Nature is fragile, Mary Shelley seems to be saying, and cannot be desecrated with impunity: as Wordsworth wrote at the end of Nutting: "[...] with gentle hand, touch/ For there is a spirit in the wood".[76]

An ontological crime edit

Frankenstein's Promethean dimension covers almost every aspect of the text, whether purely literary, philosophical or moral. The psychological singularity of the characters, especially Victor, exists, but is far from fundamental. Indeed, the very subtitle of the novel immediately places Frankenstein outside human norms. Whatever his affinities with the Romantic hero whose silhouette emerges at the end of the 18th century and finds its plenitude in the first decades of the 19th century, he belongs, in his conception and in the represented projection of this conception, to myth and the imaginary. Nor, like other characters, is he reduced to a single constant, quickly becoming what E. M. Forster has called a round character, full of substance.[24]

His antecedents are legends, doctrines and literary works.[24]

Mary Shelley's prophetic intuition is to be commended, as she inserts herself into a Gothic tradition that is almost on the wane, renewing the genre[77] but, above all, forcing it to pose one of mankind's major problems - that of its own limits.[75] As technology continues to evolve much faster than morality, the duty of the human community, she shows, is to define and set the methods and constraints necessary to ensure that the boundaries of the possible remain unbroken. In fact, Victor's transgression was a crime against humanity and, beyond that, against the Being itself: it was an ontological crime.[78]

The modern reader, like Mary Shelley's contemporary, cannot but endorse the opinion expressed by Percy Bysshe Shelley about his wife's book:

We debate with ourselves in wonder, as we read it, what could have been the series of thoughts -- what could have been the peculiar experiences that awakened them -- which conduced, in the author's mind, to the astonishing combinations of motives and incidents, and the startling catastrophe, which comprise this tale . . . The elementary feelings of a human mind are exposed to view, and those who are accustomed to reason deeply on their origin and tendency will, perhaps, be the only persons who can sympathize, to the full extent, in the interest of the actions which are their result[79]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Insofar as La Mettrie was part of a movement of mechanistic philosophers and even technicians striving to create an artificial man, the emphasis right from the start is on manufacturing, and on the very modern.
  2. ^ In fact, an anonymous writer declared in Fraser's Magazine, January 1837, that he intended to write a kind of parody entitled The New Frankenstein, based on an illustration in this translation.
  3. ^ This is the spelling used to present and publish Jean-Philippe Rameau's work.
  4. ^ The Golden Age and Paradise represent two figures of a lost original happiness. In the Greco-Latin tradition, the Golden Age is a primordial state where men live without suffering or aging, where generous nature exempts them from work, where peace and justice reign: the Golden Race still lives in proximity to the gods. This same proximity is that of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. A place of delights and perfection, Paradise has at its center a spring of living water, which divides into four rivers that will irrigate the world, and two trees. For most of the Christian tradition, Paradise is on Earth, in the East or West, but access to it is now forbidden to mankind. For many utopians, particularly in the 19th century, time must be reversed, with the Golden Age no longer at the beginning but at the end, as the end of history and progress. In fact, in the Hesiodic myth of the Golden Age, time is cyclical; and in the Judeo-Christian tradition, the coming of the Messiah is a promise of restoration.
  5. ^ The etymology of the word "monster" implies the gaze of others, that which is shown: monstrum.
  6. ^ Mary Shelley frequently saw Humphry Davy at his parents' home and was familiar with his theories and experiments, as Ford K. Brown testifies.
  7. ^ François Rabelais, Pantagruel ("Science without conscience is but the ruin of the soul").
  8. ^ From John Milton's Paradise Lost: "Did I request thee, Maker, / From my clay. To mould Me man? Did I solicit thee. / From darkness to promote me?", X, 773-745, a quotation that appears in Frankenstein as an epigraph on the title page.
  9. ^ Stupeo, Atonitus : I'm stunned, as if struck by thunder.
  10. ^ Allusion to Malherbe, Stances, "Prière pour le roi Henri le Grand, allant en Limozin", stanza 14.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Duperray 1994, p. 33.
  2. ^ "L'homme-machine et Emmanuel Kant". jeanpaulcoupal.blogspot.fr. 22 January 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2013..
  3. ^ a b c d e Eslahpazir, Jobin, Résumé, Fiche de lecture, Frankenstein ou le Prométhée moderne (in French), Québec, p. 3.
  4. ^ Férone, Geneviève; Vincent, Jean-Didier, Bienvenue en Transhumanie : Sur l'homme de demain, Paris, Grasset, 2011, chapitre 1.
  5. ^ Lecercle 1988, p. 24.
  6. ^ a b c d Essaka Joshua, Mary Shelley: Frankenstein, Humanities-Ebooks, 2008, 77 p.
  7. ^ "Le commandeur". don-juan.net. Retrieved May 1, 2013..
  8. ^ a b Duperray 1994, p. 41.
  9. ^ "Pygmalion roi de Chypre et sculpteur". mythologica.fr. Retrieved 15 May 2013..
  10. ^ a b Pollin, Burton R., "Philosophical and Literary Sources of Frankenstein", Comparative Literature, 17, 2, 1965, pp. 97-108.
  11. ^ Bernardin, M. N., « Le Théâtre de Mme de Genlis - Galatée » (in French), Revue des Cours et Conférences, X, November, 1902, pp. 74-82.
  12. ^ Dryden, John , Translation of « Pygmalion and the Statue », Works of the English Poets, London, 1810.
  13. ^ "Réductions pour piano de J. P. Rameau". fnac.com. Retrieved 6 May 2013..
  14. ^ Blunden, Edmund, Shelley, New York, Viking Press, 1947, pp. 153-154.
  15. ^ Bigland, Eileen, Mary Shelley, Appleton-Century-Crofts, New York, 1959, pp. 94-95.
  16. ^ Zillman, Lawrence, Shelley's Prometheus Unbound, Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1959, p. 3.
  17. ^ Mulhallen, Jacqueline, The Theatre of Shelley, Cambridge, Open Book Publishers, 2010, pp. 147-176.
  18. ^ a b c d Duperray 1994, pp. 30–31.
  19. ^ "Prométhée délivré sur Encyclopædia Universalis". universalis.fr. Retrieved 6 May 2013..
  20. ^ a b Duperray 1994, p. 22.
  21. ^ a b Duperray 1994, p. 23.
  22. ^ Duperray 1994, p. 37.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rohrmoser, Andreas, « The Origin of a Myth: Mary Shelley's Novel Frankenstein », Frankenstein, "Les origines du mythe". members.aon.at. Retrieved 7 May 2013., pp. 12-17.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hamberg, Cynthia, Character Descriptions (in Frankenstein), "Frankenstein" (PDF). cwu.edu. Retrieved 7 May 2013..
  25. ^ a b c Duperray 1994, pp. 24–25.
  26. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses, « Premières métamorphoses dans l'univers » (1, 1-252), Book I, Translation and notes from Boxus, A.-M. and Poucet, J., Bruxelles, 2005.
  27. ^ Duperray 1994, p. 32.
  28. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses, 1, 1-252, Selected Classics Library, UCL.
  29. ^ a b c d e Woodbridge, Kim A., The Literary Sources of Frankenstein, . kimwoodbridge.com. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 7 May 2013., pp. 5-7.
  30. ^ Shelley, Mary, Journal, p. 43-47.
  31. ^ a b c d Duperray 1994, p. 19.
  32. ^ Rossetti, William Michael, ed., The Diary of Dr John William Polidori, London, 1911, pp. 123-124.
  33. ^ Shelley, Mary, Frankenstein, « Préface ».
  34. ^ Reuchlin, Johannes, De arte cabalistica (1517), trans. François Secret : La kabbale, Aubier-Montaigne, 1973.
  35. ^ Arola, Raimon, La Cábala y la Alquimia en la Tradición Espiritual de Occidente, XV-XVII, José J. de Olañeta, ed, pp. 201-214.
  36. ^ de Palacio, Jean, Mary Shelley dans son œuvre : contribution aux études shelleyennes, Paris, Klinsieck, 1969, p. 10.
  37. ^ Cooper, Peter, « Humphry Davy— a Penzance prodigy », The Pharmaceutical Journal, vol. 265, n° 7128, 30 décembre 2000, pp. 920-921.
  38. ^ Shelley, Mary, Journal, éd. Frederick L. Jones, Norman, Oklahoma, 1947, p. 73.
  39. ^ Brown, Ford K., William Godwin, London, 1926, p. 179.
  40. ^ Godwin, William, lettre à Coleridge, December 24, 1799.
  41. ^ Baldick, Chris, Frankenstein's Shadow: Myth, Monstrosity, and Nineteenth-Century Writings, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1987, p. 53.
  42. ^ Lecercle 1988, p. 58.
  43. ^ Goldberg, M. A., Moral and Myth in Frankenstein, Keats-Shelley Journal, VIII, hiver 1959, pp. 27-38.
  44. ^ Bysshe, Percy & Shelley, Mary, Journal, p. 47 sq..
  45. ^ Godwin, William, The Lives of Edward and John Phillips, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1815.
  46. ^ Weber, Ingeborg, « Doch einem mag es gelingen », Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: Text, Kontext, Wirkung; Vorträge des Frankenstein-Symposiums in Ingolstadt (juin 1993), éd. Günther Blaicher, Essen, Verlag Die Blaue Eule, 1994, p. 24.
  47. ^ Rieger, James, « Dr Polidori and the Genesis of Frankenstein », Studies in English Life, 1963, p. XXXII.
  48. ^ "Concordance entre le Paradis perdu et Frankenstein". skifreak01.blogspot.fr. 23 August 2009. Retrieved 15 May 2013..
  49. ^ Godwin, William , An Enquiry concerning Political Justice, and its Influence on General Virtue and Happiness, 2 volumes, Londres, G. G. & J. Robinson, 1798, I, 72, p. 323.
  50. ^ "Frankenstein et The Rime of the Ancient Mariner". shsaplit.wikispaces.com. Retrieved May 6, 2013..
  51. ^ "Frankenstein et La Complainte du vieux marin". brighthubeducation.com. 20 May 2009. Retrieved 5 May 2013..
  52. ^ a b Duperray 1994, pp. 20–21.
  53. ^ Lecercle 1988, pp. 45–46.
  54. ^ a b c Woodbridge, Kim A. . kimwoodbridge.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2013..
  55. ^ Duperray 1994, p. 43.
  56. ^ a b c Duperray 1994, pp. 34–35.
  57. ^ a b c d Burke, Edmund, (1729–1797), « Of the Sublime », On the Sublime and Beautiful, Harvard, The Harvard Classics, 1909–1914, part 2, chapter 6.
  58. ^ Vermeir, Koen; Deckard, Michael (ed.), « The Science of Sensibility: Reading Burke's Philosophical Enquiry », International Archives of the History of Ideas, Vol. 206, Springer, 2012.
  59. ^ For a translation of these sentences, see "French translation of Burke's book". play.google.com. Retrieved May 4, 2013..
  60. ^ Burke, Edmund (1729–1797), « Terror », On the Sublime and Beautiful, The Harvard Classics, 1909–1914, part 2, chapter 2.
  61. ^ a b Burke, Edmund (1729–1797), « Terror », On the Sublime and Beautiful, Harvard, The Harvard Classics, 1909–1914, part 2, chapter 3.
  62. ^ a b Kiely, R., The Romantic Novel in England, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 1972, p. 159.
  63. ^ Jones, Chris, "Major Themes in Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley". voices.yahoo.com. Retrieved 7 May 2013..
  64. ^ Duperray 1994, p. 61.
  65. ^ Duperray 1994, pp. 63–65.
  66. ^ Fredericks, Nancy, « On the sublime and beautiful in Shelley's Frankenstein », Essays in Literature, September 22, 1966.
  67. ^ "Malherbe, Prière pour le roi Henri le Grand". fr.wikisource.org. Retrieved 5 May 2013..
  68. ^ Duperray 1994, p. 62.
  69. ^ Punter, David, The Romantic Unconscious, New York, New York University Press, 1990, p. 131.
  70. ^ Silverman, Devon, "Feminism Themes in Frankenstein by Mary Shelley". voices.yahoo.com. Retrieved 7 May 2013..
  71. ^ Shakespeare, William , Henri V (play), act IV, scene 3, "Henri V's speech". gonderzone.org. Retrieved 5 May 2013..
  72. ^ Shakespeare, William , The Tempest, act IV, scene 1, lines 146-158.
  73. ^ Baldick, Chris, « Frankenstein's Shadow: Myth, Monstrosity, and Nineteenth-Century Writing », Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1987, p. 52.
  74. ^ Botting, Fred, Gothic, Londres, Routledge, 1996, p. 103.
  75. ^ a b Duperray 1994, p. 45.
  76. ^ Wordsworth, William, « Nutting », Lyrical Ballads, 1799, lines 56-57.
  77. ^ Duperray 1994, p. 30.
  78. ^ Bozzetto, Roger, Le fantastique dans tous ses états, Aix-en-Provence (in French), Presses universitaires de l'Université de Provence, 2001, ISBN 2853994953, 978-2853994958, p. 82.
  79. ^ Athenaeum, nov. 10, 1832, p. 730, cited by Thomas Medwin, The Shelley Papers, Londres, 1833, p. 165-170 and Robert Ingpen and Walter Peck, éds., Complete Works of Shelley, Londres, (1926-1929), VI, p. 263-265

Bibliography edit

  • Burke, Edmund (1757). A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful. London: Printed for R. and J. Dodsley.
    "Edmund Burke's work online". gutenberg.org. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
  • Shelley, Mary; Wolfson, Susan J. (2007). Frankenstein. New York: Pearson Longman. ISBN 978-0-321-39953-3.
  • Shelley, Mary; Paley, Morton D. (1998). The Last Man. Oxford: Oxford Paperbacks. ISBN 0-19-283865-2.
  • Duperray, Max (1994). Mary Shelley, Frankenstein (in French and English). Vanves: CNED.
  • Ferrieux, Robert (1994). Mary Shelley, Frankenstein (in French and English). Perpignan: Université de Perpignan Via Domitia.
  • Hume, R. D. (1969). Gothic vs Romantic; A Revaluation of the Gothic Novel. Los Angeles: PMLA 84. pp. 282-290.
  • Scholes, R.; Rabkin, Eric S. (1972). SF, History, Science, Vision. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 182-183.
  • Abensour, Liliane; Charras, Françoise (1978). "Gothique au féminin". Romantisme noir. Paris: L'Herne. pp. 244-252.
  • Punter, David (1980). "Gothic and Romanticism". The Literature of Terror : A History of Gothic Fictions from 1765 to the present day. London: Longman.
  • Lecercle, Jean-Jacques (1988). Frankenstein: mythe et philosophie. Paris: PUF. ISBN 978-2-13-041872-6.
  • Lacassin, Francis (1991). "Frankenstein ou l'hygiène du macabre". Mythologie et fantastique: les rivages de la nuit. Paris: Les Rivages de la nuit, jean-Pierre Bertrand ed.1991. pp. 29-51.
  • Smith, Johanna (1992). Frankenstein, A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism. Boston: Bedford Books of st Martin's Press.
  • Moeckli, Gustave (1962). Une Genevois méconnu: Frankenstein (in French). Genève: Musée de Genève, 111. pp. 10–13.
  • Cude, Wilfred (1972). "M. Shelley's Modern Prometheus: A Study in the ethics of scientific creativity" (PDF). The Dalhousie Review. Vol. 52, no. 2. Dalhousie: Dalhousie University. pp. 212–225..
  • Pollin, B. R. (1965). "Philosophical and Lierary Sources of Frankenstein". Comparative Literature, 17.2. pp. 97-108.
  • Ketterer, David (1979). Frankenstein's Creation, The Book, The Monster and the Human Reality. Victoria: Victoria University Press.
  • Ponneau, G. (1976). Le mythe de Frankenstein et le retour aux images (in French). Paris: Trames. pp. 3-16.
  • Levine, G. (1973). "Frankenstein and the tradition of Realism". Novel, 7. pp. 14-30.

External links edit

  • Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus, in Wikisource.
  • "Edmund Burke's work online". gutenberg.org. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
  • www.frankensteinfilms.com Frankenstein: movies, novel and games.

frankenstein, promethean, dimension, this, page, currently, being, merged, after, discussion, consensus, merge, this, page, found, help, implement, merge, following, instructions, help, merging, resolution, discussion, this, article, multiple, issues, please, . This page is currently being merged After a discussion consensus to merge this page was found You can help implement the merge by following the instructions at Help Merging and the resolution on the discussion This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may lack focus or may be about more than one topic In particular The contents of the section Metaphysical aesthetic and ethical aspects have a dubious connection with the Promethean theme and presented like this as if in some sort of union with the Promethean dimention of Frankenstein could constitute original research Please help improve this article possibly by splitting the article and or by introducing a disambiguation page or discuss this issue on the talk page September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message It has been suggested that this article be merged into Victor Frankenstein Discuss Proposed since September 2023 As the story of Mary Shelley s 1818 novel Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus recounts the making of a kind of human being The title references Prometheus a titan in Greek mythology who brought fire to humanity Frontispiece from the 1831 edition The title of the novel echoes the call of the French materialist philosopher La Mettrie 1709 1751 in 1747 in his Homme machine for the advent of a new Prometheus who would set in motion a reconstituted human machine 1 N 1 Mary Shelley did not invent the expression which had already been used in the early 18th century and closer to its end by Immanuel Kant 2 and Frankenstein goes far beyond the technical substratum presenting in addition to its borrowings from myth metaphysical aesthetic and ethical aspects 3 Contents 1 Mythological influences 1 1 References to the original Prometheus myth 1 2 References to Ovid s Prometheus 1 3 Borrowings from John Milton and Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2 Metaphysical aesthetic and ethical aspects 2 1 Transgression 2 1 1 Creation 2 1 2 The gift of life 2 2 The sublime 2 2 1 The sublime according to Burke 2 2 2 Mary Shelley s use of the sublime 2 3 Morality 2 3 1 A paroxysmal oscillation 2 3 2 A response through action 3 An ontological crime 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksMythological influences edit nbsp Felicite de Genlis by Lemoine Frankenstein tells the story of a man seeking to surpass his condition akin to that of Icarus the bird man destroyed by the physical order of the universe 4 It also evokes the more recent eighteenth century Faust 5 thirsting for knowledge beyond the limits assigned to Man even if only by time Faust must give an account on the appointed date abandoning his soul to the forces of evil Mary Shelley refers to the Faustian idea that knowledge intoxicates the soul and proves dangerous when it becomes excessive becoming in itself a serpent s bite 6 The novel also contains hints of Don Juanism the hero s quest is never satisfied and like the statue of the commander 7 the monster appears and precipitates Frankenstein into the bowels of a psychological hell 8 whose fire is the bite of glaciation Frankenstein also evokes Pygmalion 6 king of Cyprus and a sculptor in love with the statue of a woman he has just completed a new Galatea of flesh and blood after Aphrodite breathes life into her 9 The latter myth was known to Mary Shelley who had read it first and foremost in the Nouveaux contes moraux et nouvelles historiques published by Madame de Genlis in 1802 10 11 then in John Dryden s translation again published in 1810 12 N 2 and which she also knew from Rameau s Pigmalion 1748 N 3 reductions of which for fortepiano were circulating throughout Europe 13 References to the original Prometheus myth edit nbsp Prometheus by Eduard Muller 1828 1895 Mary Shelley first refers to the Greek myth of Prometheus struggling against the omnipotence of Zeus stealing fire from Olympus and bringing it to mankind to help and save them In this version of the myth the rebellious Titan intends to break human destiny by giving them the primary element of energy and thus of technology as well as a symbol of Knowledge He is Prometheus Pyrophoros the bearer transporter and provider of fire This Prometheus whose name means Provider sees beyond the human condition which he befriends As a Titan he enjoys immortality and his punishment according to Aeschylus is to be chained to Mount Caucasus in India and tortured by the eagle which gnaws away at his liver every day regenerating it at night Byron also wrote his Prometheus 14 15 but the work whose gestation and genesis Mary Shelley was at least able to know 16 for it was written after Frankenstein between 1818 and 1819 was her lover then husband Percy Bysshe Shelley s Prometheus Unbound a four act play depicting the Titan more or less mingled with the Lucifer of Milton s Paradise Lost a champion of moral and humanitarian virtues frankly freed from the yoke of Jupiter and heralding the liberation of mankind 17 In many ways however it is a departure from the Prometheus Unbound which combines the liberation of the rebellious hero with the downfall of a cruel god the principle and symbol of evil 3 The catastrophe takes on cosmic proportions and the hopes of the modern soul are focused on the advent of a new universe 18 Shelley s stubborn belief in the ultimate triumph of love and the avenue of the Golden Age N 4 is fulfilled in the victory over Evil of a hero free of all taint and entirely worthy of representing the Good 19 Purified by suffering inhabited by humility and mansuetude disavowing his ancient pride and hatred he becomes on his rock a figure of Christ on the cross His deliverance implies the fall of Jupiter which is precisely the birth of the Golden Age 20 The only thing Shelley s Prometheus Unbound and his wife s Frankenstein have in common then is the act of transgression beneficial in one evil in the other responsible in the former irresponsible in the latter 20 Only a few elements in Frankenstein recall this first version of the myth First of all the ambition shared by Walton Frankenstein and even the monster in the central episode of the De Lacey family to help mankind 21 Walton hopes to discover a hidden paradise beyond the polar ice caps Frankenstein claims to conquer death and improve the human race the monster provides the De Laceys with firewood here in grotesque miniature for while he possesses the Titan s power he lacks its mighty beauty is a vignette reproducing exactly the main gesture of the myth that of providing man with fire 21 The second element is fire itself the symbolism of which runs through the novel the fire energy of the storm that strikes down the old oak 22 the fire that is stolen and then lost giving warmth light and nourishment the destructive fire that sets the cottage ablaze the fire of the pyre or of Hell or the purifying fire that as the book promises will forever consume the monster itself a morbid emanation of Victor s pseudo creative imagination The third point is undoubtedly the allegory of the chained Titan s suffering 23 such is Victor s mortifying despair walled in by his silence and pain such is also the absolute solitude of the monster rejected by his creator and the common man N 5 deprived of his feminine complement 23 such is finally albeit to a lesser degree the growing anxiety which little by little undermines the youthful and initially conquering enthusiasm of Robert Walton 24 alienated from his family his crew and the commerce of men 25 References to Ovid s Prometheus edit nbsp Ovid s Metamorphoses English edition of 1567 Mary Shelley then borrows from the Prometheus of Ovid s Metamorphoses 26 in which the Titan rather than coming to man s aid usurps the power of the gods then fabricates man and confers on him through manipulations of ethereal energy the most mysterious and sacred of goods life He is the Prometheus Pyrophoros et plasticator 27 i e the thief of fire then the shaper the craftsman who transforms clay into man Beyond the original meaning of Ovid s title for there is more to it than a change of form Meta morphoses In noua fert animus mutatas dicere formas Corpora 28 this is an act of creation but with a technique materials and energy 29 It was from Ovid s Prometheus that Mary Shelley drew both the idea of a living humanoid and the method for breathing life into it 30 What was the work of a Titan became that of a mortal but one intoxicated by science to the point of believing in his own immortality Like the Titan he uses know how in this case acquired through study particularly of the so called natural sciences physics and chemistry 31 Like the Titan too he is seized numbed by a feverish enthusiasm for his decision the accomplishment of his work the final technical act conferring the spark of life The energy of the ether was replaced in a period of scientific discovery by what Victor s intuition first called particles of celestial fire then what his knowledge enabled him to identify as the galvanizing use of electricity 32 33 He succeeded in what the scientists of the time hoped one day to achieve in fact the old foolish dream of the alchemists the idea the imagination the enthusiasm it was first Cornelius Agrippa 34 and Paracelsus 35 36 then more rationally Professor Waldman no doubt inspired Mary Shelley by Humphry Davy 37 38 writing in 1816 science has conferred on him man powers that might almost be called creative to interrogate nature in mastery and to penetrate its deepest secrets fiction erases Humphry Davy s almost and takes the plunge 31 N 6 39 40 There is thus a very modern dimension to Mary Shelley s use of this Prometheus as metamorphoser creator artist craftsman 31 Like the Titan Victor uses clay the living having returned to dust and shapes it into a living being The being had returned to nothingness and from nothing he promotes it back to being in an act that is above all scientific imagination has joined forces with experimentation equipping itself with new techniques the scientist is the new Prometheus dominating hero master of the world 41 In this respect Frankenstein raises questions that are still relevant today science can destroy man but it can also modify use and manipulate him 42 The fact that this Prometheus poses the problem of his power implies de facto that alongside cognitive awareness moral awareness must intervene to avoid not only the ruin of the soul N 7 but also that of man himself 31 Borrowings from John Milton and Samuel Taylor Coleridge edit nbsp Satan expelled from Heaven by Gustave Dore In addition to these two versions of the Prometheus myth there are borrowings from Milton s Paradise Lost 43 often mentioned in the Shelleys diaries 44 particularly when William Godwin published his work on the poet s nephews 45 and from Coleridge s poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner 29 Like Milton s Satan 29 Mary Shelley s modern Prometheus has rebelled against the divine order that is against God himself 10 like Milton s God Victor abandons his creature 46 like Satan 29 Victor and his creature express their loneliness and despair 47 like Satan too the monster suffers but does not submit deciding in the end to choose Evil like Milton s Adam finally he reproaches his creator for having taken him from the earth to make human clay N 8 48 49 nbsp Illustration of Coleridge s poem by Gustave Dore Like Coleridge s sailor Victor has destroyed the divine order and has remained abandoned by God 50 solitary deprived of certainties on icy continents in the image of the glaciation from which his soul suffers 51 However he will not be saved the exorcism of his story will not save him from physical death the last avatar of the death of his being that occurred when he gave life to the monster he would thus have placed his own life in a hideous body 23 because since the application of the instruments of life he will not cease to decay before perishing altogether 52 Likewise and in this respect similar to his creator also abandoned by his god the monster finds himself isolated in a universe whose harmony he perceives but cannot share So he puts his body in unison with his soul and entrusts it to the inaccessible peaks and icy deserts that respond to the coldness of his heart dragging along his pursuer who is no longer sure whether he is hunter or game 52 Metaphysical aesthetic and ethical aspects editTransgression edit nbsp Frankenstein manuscript The act of transgression exists but is never qualified as such The vocabulary used by Victor who is not Mary Shelley s spokesman 23 as he constructs his narrative by restructuring his life and putting it into perspective in the light of what he has retained from it with its weaknesses its emotional burdens its weight of character is limited to a semantics of research and discovery Thus he uses probe into penetrate explore discover etc to describe the dynamics of his action and hidden recesses deep secrets unknown territories further knowledge etc to delimit the field of his hard work Very rarely a verb like trespass is used to indicate that the work goes beyond any norm If there is any judgment on the author s part it s in the unfolding of the action and Frankenstein s psychological punishment 24 rather than explicitly expressed by the successive narrator s 6 Only the monster is led like Milton s Adam to deplore the advent of an undesired life 6 still this is an existential misfortune that he endures rather than an ontological refusal of accession to being 53 Transgression consists in the making of a being then and above all in the act of giving it life 23 Creation edit The creation itself is presented as based on abnormality 23 The monster s body is a mass of dead flesh and animal flesh Admittedly the process responds to a possibility evoked by certain eighteenth century scientists however there is a desacralization of the human being a corruption of his integrity a defilement of his purity 8 all in the light of a Judeo Christian vision of Man Mary Shelley does not refer to it explicitly but the socio cultural context of the action presupposes its existence as an integral part of the collective consciousness A dead body can only be resurrected by the One who created it and animal flesh is not in the image of God At the beginning of the 19th century the state of science rejected the possibility on the horizon of the inconceivable this is therefore an extreme example a kind of symbol of transgression 23 The gift of life edit nbsp Portrait of Luigi Galvani 1737 1798 Even when galvanized by electricity this gift of life seems to run up against a fundamental impossibility as it s a question of passing from nothingness to being On the other hand the monster does not remain in a vegetative state but proves to be endowed with a cognitive and moral consciousness in every respect equal to that of man 3 As far as the species is concerned apart from its aesthetic aspect 23 it is even superior to man surpassing him in strength mobility and agility Without specifying to whom and to what the right to confer life belongs Mary Shelley suggests that in any case it does not belong to man other than by natural transmission 54 Frankenstein through its title its overt and covert quotations its allusions and vocabulary borrowings refers to the myth of Prometheus and then to Paradise Lost one can conclude that the order it presents is above all divine The act of transgression thus appears as a usurpation of the sacred the exclusive province of divinity However in both cases the presupposed god is domineering jealous of his prerogatives vengeful even Olympian Zeus or Jupiter perhaps the God of the Old Testament 23 The punishment will be extreme in the image of the crime or sin family moral and physical destruction 18 However the constant reference to the major poetic texts of Mary Shelley s contemporaries and friends Wordsworth Coleridge and of course Byron and Shelley and the direct allusions to works such as Tintern Abbey Childe Harold s Pilgrimage 25 and Mutability which rest on a substratum of diffuse pantheism would suggest that the divine order and the natural order merge 18 One of the functions of nature in Frankenstein is to suggest if only on a sensory and perceptual level the presence of transcendence harmony in the Rhine valley sovereign grandeur atop the Alpine peaks infinity and eternity on the icy oceans 55 The sublime edit The sublime according to Burke edit nbsp Edmund Burke As explained by Edmund Burke in 1757 it is based on astonishment 56 and to a lesser degree admiration and reverence all notions in fact by products of terror see according to Burke the Latin words stupeo or attonitus N 9 The ingredients are darkness power 57 58 A few quotations from Burke help to understand this aspect Whatever is fitted in any sort to excite the ideas of pain and danger that is to say whatever is in any sort terrible or is conversant about terrible objects or operates in a manner analogous to terror is a source of the sublime 57 59 Whatever is terrible with regard to sight is sublime too 60 Greatly night adds to our dread Almost all the heathen temples were dark The druids performed all the ceremonies in the bosom of the darkest woods No person seems better to have understood the secret of heightening or of setting terrible things if I may use the expression in their strongest light by the force of a judicious obscurity than Milton 61 To make any thing very terrible obscurity seems in general to be necessary 61 I know of nothing sublime which is not some modification of power 57 strength violence pain and terror are ideas that rush in upon the mind together 57 Mary Shelley s use of the sublime edit nbsp Wanderer above the Sea of Fog 1817 by Caspar David Friedrich Mary Shelley uses the ingredients analyzed or simply listed by Burke to associate Victor Frankenstein s transgression with the notion of the sublime either to make him describe his states of mind whether inhabited by torment or exaltation 62 or to create the illusion that landscapes impose notions of greatness and disquiet elevation or unease 56 steep valleys dark forests etc or simply to arouse a gothic terror or in the first part horror in the reader The monster too is sublime in its conception obscurity isolation its size out of the ordinary and frightening the places it chooses and imposes on Victor forests peaks valleys abysses vast deserts tumultuous or frozen oceans the unspeakable absoluteness of its solitude the extremity of its feelings the unpredictability of its character 56 its alliance with the elements storms glaciers darkness earth water fire 62 For the sublime also lies within human beings Like a natural landscape the panorama of the soul arouses astonishment admiration and respect or else by opposition or default sinks into ridicule ludicrous according to Burke 63 Soon the inner landscape becomes nocturnal on the edge of consciousness a dark convulsive spasmodic turmoil through a play of mirrors reminiscent of the nested reflective structure the monster to which Victor has nevertheless given life becomes the very projection of his death wish The transgression has been placed under the sign of Thanatos the monster is the negative double of his creator 64 his evil Doppelganger 65 who carries out the death sentence unconsciously pronounced by Victor 24 on his family his friend his wife whom he believes he adores but whom he has experienced as castrating suffocating him with love protection moral comfort and social certainties 18 The being torn apart by suffering is also a divided being in turn and at the same time creator and destroyer provider of life and death hunter and prey executioner and victim 54 The abject monster turns out to be sublime and the creator thought to be sublime turns out to be abject 66 This necessarily leads to an escape 3 the escape of the characters who find each other only to lose each other the escape of Victor then of the monster the pursuit of one by the other then of the other by the one quests as ardent as they are senseless Walton s Victor s ardour that exceeded moderation the monster s dream of bliss that cannot be realized leading to nothingness 24 Walton fails to reach the continent of happiness Victor destroys his loved ones by procuration before destroying himself the monster immolates himself with the fire that promoted him to being The quest remains nothing more than a sterile frozen quest the fruits have not kept the promise of the flowers N 10 67 Morality edit The story is never told by a heterodiegetic narrator Successive layers of first person narration are superimposed by the echoes left in the various listeners and the reader 68 None of the three narrators is Mary Shelley s spokesperson at least not unreservedly She entrusts each with words and therefore character traits principles actions feelings and emotions that she seems to approve of and others that she rejects 24 The good and the not so good the evil and the not so evil are all mixed up to varying degrees and the author uses a range of devices albeit rather limited and rather stereotyped to let her degree of sympathy aversion or amused contempt shine through At times she approaches the narrators who are never protagonists in the raw since all actions belong to the past and are filtered through a network of successive consciousnesses only to distance herself from them in a constant game of hide and seek swaying to the whim of her irony 24 This explains why the author sometimes seems to be moving in the direction of Walton s romantic enthusiasm or even Frankenstein s and at other times to be completely detached from it 24 A paroxysmal oscillation edit nbsp Percy Bysshe Shelley by Alfred Clint based on Amelia Curran All the more so in fact as this character s oscillation between euphoria and prostration is pushed to the extreme Admittedly this is a kind of stark representation of the romantic hero 69 but through the repetition of attacks and crises the portrait of a character that psychiatry would call bipolar gradually emerges rather unlike his creator Indeed as far as we know and despite the tumultuous effervescence of her household Mary cultivated the memory of her husband and was concerned with his work but in a way that erased much of its radicalism and she always sought to establish a compromise between her fidelity and her condition as a woman the offspring of a famous family the widow of a poet of genius evolving in a non conformist medium but a woman all the same in a society reluctant to accept feminist outbursts 70 This is how the reader could be taken in by Victor Frankenstein s contradictory statements and find in them a vacillating ambiguity of Mary Shelley s ethical conceptions 23 His acts of contrition are easily contrasted as adisplayed at the beginning of his story with for example the fiery heroic comic speech he addresses to Walton s sailors in which he enjoins upon them the firmness of a grand design and the duty of heroism The exhortation is peppered with ironic nods to William Shakespeare including the young Henry V s speech to his soldiers St Crispin s Day 71 and a disguised quotation from The Tempest in the line This is not made of such stuff as your hearts may be parodying the lines We are such stuff As dreams are made on and our little life Is rounded with a sleep spoken by Prospero 72 Then she s framed by bouts of deep despondency sunk in languor only Walton captivated by the character falls under her spell a voice so modulated an eye so full of lofty design and heroism A response through action edit nbsp Immanuel Kant Mary Shelley s response to Frankenstein s transgression is to be found in the very unfolding of the action Frankenstein is among other things a matter of crime and punishment 3 the systematic destruction of his family s relational and moral fabric the disintegration of his being through isolation guilt inner torture 29 and ultimately the extinction of life 1 So to claim that the enterprise itself is not reprehensible is a sophism the tragic personal consequences the upheaval of institutions the absurd operation of justice 25 which condemns on the basis of appearances 73 are the result of flawed premises The quest was evil and the Grail a poisoned chalice 74 Insofar as the higher moral instance cannot be identified since in many ways Frankenstein s world is a world without God 23 it is appropriate to use the vocabulary of Kant s Critique of Practical Reason known and appreciated by Coleridge published in 1787 and simply evoke the presence of a categorical imperative Here the moral law exists but one cannot know its origin imposing itself rather than imposing it and certainly not revealing it it is in his inspired but irresponsible adolescent dream 75 Victor has consciously set it aside and in the process peace happiness and life itself have slipped away from him 54 Nature is fragile Mary Shelley seems to be saying and cannot be desecrated with impunity as Wordsworth wrote at the end of Nutting with gentle hand touch For there is a spirit in the wood 76 An ontological crime editFrankenstein s Promethean dimension covers almost every aspect of the text whether purely literary philosophical or moral The psychological singularity of the characters especially Victor exists but is far from fundamental Indeed the very subtitle of the novel immediately places Frankenstein outside human norms Whatever his affinities with the Romantic hero whose silhouette emerges at the end of the 18th century and finds its plenitude in the first decades of the 19th century he belongs in his conception and in the represented projection of this conception to myth and the imaginary Nor like other characters is he reduced to a single constant quickly becoming what E M Forster has called a round character full of substance 24 His antecedents are legends doctrines and literary works 24 Mary Shelley s prophetic intuition is to be commended as she inserts herself into a Gothic tradition that is almost on the wane renewing the genre 77 but above all forcing it to pose one of mankind s major problems that of its own limits 75 As technology continues to evolve much faster than morality the duty of the human community she shows is to define and set the methods and constraints necessary to ensure that the boundaries of the possible remain unbroken In fact Victor s transgression was a crime against humanity and beyond that against the Being itself it was an ontological crime 78 The modern reader like Mary Shelley s contemporary cannot but endorse the opinion expressed by Percy Bysshe Shelley about his wife s book We debate with ourselves in wonder as we read it what could have been the series of thoughts what could have been the peculiar experiences that awakened them which conduced in the author s mind to the astonishing combinations of motives and incidents and the startling catastrophe which comprise this tale The elementary feelings of a human mind are exposed to view and those who are accustomed to reason deeply on their origin and tendency will perhaps be the only persons who can sympathize to the full extent in the interest of the actions which are their result 79 See also edit nbsp Science fiction portal nbsp Speculative fiction portalFrankenstein s monster Science fiction Literature of England Frankenstein Castle Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus 1818 novel Gothic aspects in FrankensteinNotes edit Insofar as La Mettrie was part of a movement of mechanistic philosophers and even technicians striving to create an artificial man the emphasis right from the start is on manufacturing and on the very modern In fact an anonymous writer declared in Fraser s Magazine January 1837 that he intended to write a kind of parody entitled The New Frankenstein based on an illustration in this translation This is the spelling used to present and publish Jean Philippe Rameau s work The Golden Age and Paradise represent two figures of a lost original happiness In the Greco Latin tradition the Golden Age is a primordial state where men live without suffering or aging where generous nature exempts them from work where peace and justice reign the Golden Race still lives in proximity to the gods This same proximity is that of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden A place of delights and perfection Paradise has at its center a spring of living water which divides into four rivers that will irrigate the world and two trees For most of the Christian tradition Paradise is on Earth in the East or West but access to it is now forbidden to mankind For many utopians particularly in the 19th century time must be reversed with the Golden Age no longer at the beginning but at the end as the end of history and progress In fact in the Hesiodic myth of the Golden Age time is cyclical and in the Judeo Christian tradition the coming of the Messiah is a promise of restoration The etymology of the word monster implies the gaze of others that which is shown monstrum Mary Shelley frequently saw Humphry Davy at his parents home and was familiar with his theories and experiments as Ford K Brown testifies Francois Rabelais Pantagruel Science without conscience is but the ruin of the soul From John Milton s Paradise Lost Did I request thee Maker From my clay To mould Me man Did I solicit thee From darkness to promote me X 773 745 a quotation that appears in Frankenstein as an epigraph on the title page Stupeo Atonitus I m stunned as if struck by thunder Allusion to Malherbe Stances Priere pour le roi Henri le Grand allant en Limozin stanza 14 References edit a b Duperray 1994 p 33 L homme machine et Emmanuel Kant jeanpaulcoupal blogspot fr 22 January 2013 Retrieved 9 May 2013 a b c d e Eslahpazir Jobin Resume Fiche de lecture Frankenstein ou le Promethee moderne in French Quebec p 3 Ferone Genevieve Vincent Jean Didier Bienvenue en Transhumanie Sur l homme de demain Paris Grasset 2011 chapitre 1 Lecercle 1988 p 24 a b c d Essaka Joshua Mary Shelley Frankenstein Humanities Ebooks 2008 77 p Le commandeur don juan net Retrieved May 1 2013 a b Duperray 1994 p 41 Pygmalion roi de Chypre et sculpteur mythologica fr Retrieved 15 May 2013 a b Pollin Burton R Philosophical and Literary Sources of Frankenstein Comparative Literature 17 2 1965 pp 97 108 Bernardin M N Le Theatre de Mme de Genlis Galatee in French Revue des Cours et Conferences X November 1902 pp 74 82 Dryden John Translation of Pygmalion and the Statue Works of the English Poets London 1810 Reductions pour piano de J P Rameau fnac com Retrieved 6 May 2013 Blunden Edmund Shelley New York Viking Press 1947 pp 153 154 Bigland Eileen Mary Shelley Appleton Century Crofts New York 1959 pp 94 95 Zillman Lawrence Shelley s Prometheus Unbound Seattle University of Washington Press 1959 p 3 Mulhallen Jacqueline The Theatre of Shelley Cambridge Open Book Publishers 2010 pp 147 176 a b c d Duperray 1994 pp 30 31 Promethee delivresurEncyclopaedia Universalis universalis fr Retrieved 6 May 2013 a b Duperray 1994 p 22 a b Duperray 1994 p 23 Duperray 1994 p 37 a b c d e f g h i j k Rohrmoser Andreas The Origin of a Myth Mary Shelley s Novel Frankenstein Frankenstein Les origines du mythe members aon at Retrieved 7 May 2013 pp 12 17 a b c d e f g h i Hamberg Cynthia Character Descriptions in Frankenstein Frankenstein PDF cwu edu Retrieved 7 May 2013 a b c Duperray 1994 pp 24 25 Ovid Metamorphoses Premieres metamorphoses dans l univers 1 1 252 Book I Translation and notes from Boxus A M and Poucet J Bruxelles 2005 Duperray 1994 p 32 Ovid Metamorphoses 1 1 252 Selected Classics Library UCL a b c d e Woodbridge Kim A The Literary Sources of Frankenstein Sources litteraires kimwoodbridge com Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 7 May 2013 pp 5 7 Shelley Mary Journal p 43 47 a b c d Duperray 1994 p 19 Rossetti William Michael ed The Diary of Dr John William Polidori London 1911 pp 123 124 Shelley Mary Frankenstein Preface Reuchlin Johannes De arte cabalistica 1517 trans Francois Secret La kabbale Aubier Montaigne 1973 Arola Raimon La Cabala y la Alquimia en la Tradicion Espiritual de Occidente XV XVII Jose J de Olaneta ed pp 201 214 de Palacio Jean Mary Shelley dans son œuvre contribution aux etudes shelleyennes Paris Klinsieck 1969 p 10 Cooper Peter Humphry Davy a Penzance prodigy The Pharmaceutical Journal vol 265 n 7128 30 decembre 2000 pp 920 921 Shelley Mary Journal ed Frederick L Jones Norman Oklahoma 1947 p 73 Brown Ford K William Godwin London 1926 p 179 Godwin William lettre a Coleridge December 24 1799 Baldick Chris Frankenstein s Shadow Myth Monstrosity and Nineteenth Century Writings Oxford Clarendon Press 1987 p 53 Lecercle 1988 p 58 Goldberg M A Moral and Myth in Frankenstein Keats Shelley Journal VIII hiver 1959 pp 27 38 Bysshe Percy amp Shelley Mary Journal p 47 sq Godwin William The Lives of Edward and John Phillips London Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown 1815 Weber Ingeborg Doch einem mag es gelingen Mary Shelley sFrankenstein Text Kontext Wirkung Vortrage des Frankenstein Symposiums in Ingolstadt juin 1993 ed Gunther Blaicher Essen Verlag Die Blaue Eule 1994 p 24 Rieger James Dr Polidori and the Genesis of Frankenstein Studies in English Life 1963 p XXXII Concordance entre le Paradis perdu et Frankenstein skifreak01 blogspot fr 23 August 2009 Retrieved 15 May 2013 Godwin William An Enquiry concerning Political Justice and its Influence on General Virtue and Happiness 2 volumes Londres G G amp J Robinson 1798 I 72 p 323 FrankensteinetThe Rime of the Ancient Mariner shsaplit wikispaces com Retrieved May 6 2013 Frankenstein et La Complainte du vieux marin brighthubeducation com 20 May 2009 Retrieved 5 May 2013 a b Duperray 1994 pp 20 21 Lecercle 1988 pp 45 46 a b c Woodbridge Kim A La naissance d un monstre kimwoodbridge com Archived from the original on March 3 2008 Retrieved May 7 2013 Duperray 1994 p 43 a b c Duperray 1994 pp 34 35 a b c d Burke Edmund 1729 1797 Of the Sublime On the Sublime and Beautiful Harvard The Harvard Classics 1909 1914 part 2 chapter 6 Vermeir Koen Deckard Michael ed The Science of Sensibility Reading Burke s Philosophical Enquiry International Archives of the History of Ideas Vol 206 Springer 2012 For a translation of these sentences see French translation of Burke s book play google com Retrieved May 4 2013 Burke Edmund 1729 1797 Terror On the Sublime and Beautiful The Harvard Classics 1909 1914 part 2 chapter 2 a b Burke Edmund 1729 1797 Terror On the Sublime and Beautiful Harvard The Harvard Classics 1909 1914 part 2 chapter 3 a b Kiely R The Romantic Novel in England Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1972 p 159 Jones Chris Major Themes in Frankenstein by Mary Shelley voices yahoo com Retrieved 7 May 2013 Duperray 1994 p 61 Duperray 1994 pp 63 65 Fredericks Nancy On the sublime and beautiful in Shelley sFrankenstein Essays in Literature September 22 1966 Malherbe Priere pour le roi Henri le Grand fr wikisource org Retrieved 5 May 2013 Duperray 1994 p 62 Punter David The Romantic Unconscious New York New York University Press 1990 p 131 Silverman Devon Feminism Themes in Frankenstein by Mary Shelley voices yahoo com Retrieved 7 May 2013 Shakespeare William Henri V play act IV scene 3 Henri V s speech gonderzone org Retrieved 5 May 2013 Shakespeare William The Tempest act IV scene 1 lines 146 158 Baldick Chris Frankenstein s Shadow Myth Monstrosity and Nineteenth Century Writing Oxford Clarendon Press 1987 p 52 Botting Fred Gothic Londres Routledge 1996 p 103 a b Duperray 1994 p 45 Wordsworth William Nutting Lyrical Ballads 1799 lines 56 57 Duperray 1994 p 30 Bozzetto Roger Le fantastique dans tous ses etats Aix en Provence in French Presses universitaires de l Universite de Provence 2001 ISBN 2853994953 978 2853994958 p 82 Athenaeum nov 10 1832 p 730 cited by Thomas Medwin The Shelley Papers Londres 1833 p 165 170 and Robert Ingpen and Walter Peck eds Complete Works of Shelley Londres 1926 1929 VI p 263 265Bibliography editBurke Edmund 1757 A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful London Printed for R and J Dodsley Edmund Burke s work online gutenberg org Retrieved 4 May 2013 Shelley Mary Wolfson Susan J 2007 Frankenstein New York Pearson Longman ISBN 978 0 321 39953 3 Shelley Mary Paley Morton D 1998 The Last Man Oxford Oxford Paperbacks ISBN 0 19 283865 2 Duperray Max 1994 Mary Shelley Frankenstein in French and English Vanves CNED Ferrieux Robert 1994 Mary Shelley Frankenstein in French and English Perpignan Universite de Perpignan Via Domitia Hume R D 1969 Gothic vs Romantic A Revaluation of the Gothic Novel Los Angeles PMLA 84 pp 282 290 Scholes R Rabkin Eric S 1972 SF History Science Vision London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson pp 182 183 Abensour Liliane Charras Francoise 1978 Gothique au feminin Romantisme noir Paris L Herne pp 244 252 Punter David 1980 Gothic and Romanticism The Literature of Terror A History of Gothic Fictions from 1765 to the present day London Longman Lecercle Jean Jacques 1988 Frankenstein mythe et philosophie Paris PUF ISBN 978 2 13 041872 6 Lacassin Francis 1991 Frankenstein ou l hygiene du macabre Mythologie et fantastique les rivages de la nuit Paris Les Rivages de la nuit jean Pierre Bertrand ed 1991 pp 29 51 Smith Johanna 1992 Frankenstein A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism Boston Bedford Books of st Martin s Press Moeckli Gustave 1962 Une Genevois meconnu Frankenstein in French Geneve Musee de Geneve 111 pp 10 13 Cude Wilfred 1972 M Shelley s Modern Prometheus A Study in the ethics of scientific creativity PDF The Dalhousie Review Vol 52 no 2 Dalhousie Dalhousie University pp 212 225 Pollin B R 1965 Philosophical and Lierary Sources of Frankenstein Comparative Literature 17 2 pp 97 108 Ketterer David 1979 Frankenstein s Creation The Book The Monster and the Human Reality Victoria Victoria University Press Ponneau G 1976 Le mythe de Frankenstein et le retour aux images in French Paris Trames pp 3 16 Levine G 1973 Frankenstein and the tradition of Realism Novel 7 pp 14 30 External links editFrankenstein or the Modern Prometheus in Wikisource Edmund Burke s work online gutenberg org Retrieved 4 May 2013 www frankensteinfilms com Frankenstein movies novel and games Retrieved from https en wikipedia org 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