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Frankenstein: Enlightenment Vs. Romanticism
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Imagine Frankenstein characters as zombie/werewolf hybrids: one side wants brains, the other hearts. How to choose? Also, what to name them? Zomwol...

Frankenstein: Getting to Know Mary Shelley
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Frankenstein: Getting to Know Victor
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Is Victor Frankenstein a: Romantic Hero? b: Byronic Hero? c: Satanic Hero? d: Guitar Hero? All of the above (but maybe not D…) We don...

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Frankenstein: Mommy Issues 14421 Views


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Description:

Frankenstein reads kind of like a Freudian thesis. “My Sister Complex and Narcissism.” Siggy would have a field day.


Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:09

Frankenstein a la Shmoop

00:11

Mommy Issues

00:12

What's with all the mommy issues in Frankenstein?

00:16

And just kind of to recap a few things that are going on -

00:18

We have Walton, who is writing the entire story to his sister.

00:23

It's a little intimate, but okay.

00:26

- Intimate meaning sexual, incest-y, kind of? - Overtones. Yeah, yeah.

00:30

That's what I -- You know, subtext, Dave.

00:32

[ laughs ]

00:33

We're not subtle at Shmoop. It's baseball bat over the head.

00:36

And then we have Victor Frankenstein,

00:39

who is essentially supposed to marry his adopted sister.

00:44

Again, incestuous.

00:47

And then, you know, Henry is actually one of the

00:52

few characters in the story who's not related to Frankenstein.

00:55

So there's tons of family issues, mommy issues.

00:57

And we can really attribute this to anything.

01:00

People who like to read into the life of the author

01:02

as why certain happen in books.

01:05

We have Mary Shelley,

01:07

whose mother was the super famous feminist.

01:09

Her dad ran off with her mom

01:14

and, this was, like, totally unacceptable.

01:16

As I mentioned, she had given birth twice

01:19

by the time she wrote this book.

01:21

So a lot of people think of the monster

01:23

as a metaphor for childbirth.

01:25

Some people say Victor Frankenstein is

01:27

supposed to be Percy or her dad.

01:30

So there's -- A lot of people like to read

01:32

the biographical information onto it.

01:34

But the question is, you know,

01:36

still, "Why are the men in the book so obsessed with

01:40

their sisters and with their female relatives?"

01:43

And, on the one hand, we can just be like,

01:45

"Okay, they're just weirdos."

01:46

But most scholars tend to read

01:50

a Freudian reading of it.

01:52

Which basically means that the reason they're writing to their sisters

01:55

is because they're narcissists.

01:57

A family member is the closest you can come to yourself, right?

02:00

And so we have Walton writing to his sister.

02:02

Frankenstein is supposed to marry his sister.

02:05

And there are so many

02:07

interrelated family members in the entire story,

02:10

that it's this idea that Walton and especially Victor Frankenstein

02:14

just are so self-obsessed

02:16

and have such egos on them -

02:18

and this is very classic in Romantic heroes -

02:20

that the closest they can get to talking into a mirror

02:25

is writing to their family members.

02:29

Why are the men in Frankenstein so obsessed with their female relatives?

02:33

Hmm? Hmm?

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