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Playlist Frankenstein: Shmoopversations 14 videos

0
Frankenstein: Getting to Know Mary Shelley
2598 Views

We’ll preface this video about Frankenstein’s preface by saying that Mary Shelley is an awesome woman, and she wants everybody to be aware. Che...

1
Frankenstein: Enlightenment Vs. Romanticism
14365 Views

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

2
Frankenstein: Mommy Issues
14421 Views

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

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Frankenstein: Who is the Monster? 39632 Views


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Description:

What do Satan and Frankenstein's monster have in common? They’re both heroes. ...Wait. What?


Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:07

Your father was Frankenstein.

00:09

But your mother was the lightning!

00:12

Frankenstein a la Shmoop

00:14

Who is the Monster?

00:15

Are we supposed to sympathize with the monster?

00:20

The Romantics were obsessed with a lot of things.

00:23

They were obsessed with

00:25

emotion, and nature, and the Sublime.

00:27

And another thing they were obsessed with was Satan.

00:29

[ ominous classical music ]

00:31

They all reached back to Paradise Lost,

00:33

which is this epic poem by John Milton

00:36

which basically just recounts the story

00:40

of Satan as a fallen angel.

00:42

And, you know, kind of retells the Bible in some fashion.

00:46

Shelley actually uses a line from Paradise Lost

00:52

as the epigraph to her book,

00:53

which we'll talk about a little bit later.

00:55

But Romantic thinkers thought of Satan as a kind of hero.

00:59

You know, this Romantic hero

01:01

or Byronic hero, also called a Satanic hero.

01:03

Satan in Paradise Lost

01:05

is a hero of some sort.

01:08

Satan is a figure who is rebelling against his overlord.

01:12

In this case, God.

01:14

We think of the same thing in Frankenstein.

01:15

Is Frankenstein's monster a Satanic hero

01:19

where he's just rebelling against his overlord?

01:22

And if so, then he's Satan, but we also feel bad for him.

01:27

- Right. - Because it's not his fault.

01:28

So we can kind of have a devilish figure who we also

01:32

sympathize with.

01:34

And that ambiguity is definitely something that

01:36

Shelley's trying to bring out.

01:37

Is there an allegory there for the plight of women?

01:39

Who were -- It wasn't their fault.

01:41

They were controlled by men;

01:42

they kind of had to rebel.

01:43

But in, sort of, guilt that you would feel

01:46

and a whole range of...

01:47

Yeah, absolutely.

01:48

I mean, again, reading onto Shelley's life,

01:52

you know, this proto-feminism

01:53

and being a woman among men

01:55

is a huge part of it,

01:56

so we can really read that onto almost every part

01:58

of Frankenstein if we want.

01:59

But this idea of

02:00

you're born into a society that is one way

02:04

and you need to change that.

02:06

Can we really fault Frankenstein's monster

02:09

for wanting to rebel? No.

02:11

Can we fault Satan for wanting to rebel?

02:13

Maybe not.

02:17

Does the monster deserve our sympathy?

02:20

How did the Romantics envision Satan?

02:23

Is the monster similar to Satan?

02:27

[ evil laugh ]

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