538 1654 1 PB PDF
538 1654 1 PB PDF
538 1654 1 PB PDF
Frankenstein
WILLIAM CHRISTIE
You must excuse a trifling deviation,
From Mrs. Shelleys marvellous
narration
How far we wedding guests have attended to what Frankenstein has to say
and how far simply and unashamedly bound it to our own purposes is a
moot point. Still, the fact that it can be has been read to mean so
many things in its comparatively short life is what makes the novel
especially fascinating and challenging. And I am concerned in this article
only with the extent and variety of the academic critical attention
Frankenstein has received; only with what we might call its critical
metamorphoses. If we were to add to these critical metamorphoses all
adaptations of the novel or myth in fiction, on stage, in the cinema and in
retail, then the number of metamorphoses or different versions is quite
literally incomprehensible: impossible to get around, to encircle and take
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Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
By saying badly what the canonical male Romantic poets were saying
well, Frankenstein was thought to function at once to justify their
canonization and to illuminate the otherwise difficult, self-reflexive
enterprise of Romanticism. Where Blake and Shelley and Byron wrote of
Romanticism from the vexed inside, that is, Mary Shelley offered what
was at best a simplified version from the outside, at worst a passive
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Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
reflection of some of the wild fantasies which, as it were, hung in the air
7
about her (Mario Praz) . Like almost everything else about her life,
Frankenstein is an instance of genius observed and admired but not
8
shared, according to Robert Kiely; one of those second-rate works,
declared D. W. Harding, written under the influence of more
9
distinguished minds.
3
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
desire to (dare I say it?) rule the world! : Mad scientist and monster are
figures in a modern myth; they reflect our fears about the future of man in
13
a world of machines.
Since 1980 Frankenstein has been resituated along with all the
other literature of the Romantic period by New and old forms of
historicism in a progressively more detailed recreation of the complex and
interrelated cultures of that period. And this is nowhere more apparent
than with the culture of the experimental and theoretical sciences of the
eighteeenth and early nineteenth centuries. The general scientific
background to Frankenstein is explored at length in a monograph by
Samuel Vasbinder and in Anne Mellors discussion of the novel as A
Feminist Critique of Science: Mary Shelley based Victor Frankensteins
attempt to create a new species from dead organic matter through the use
of chemistry and electricity on the most advanced scientific research of the
early nineteenth century. Her vision of the isolated scientist discovering
the secret of life is no mere fantasy but a plausible prediction of what
14
science might accomplish. Moving beyond Mellors more abstract
approach to the history and philosophy of science, however on the
conviction that (to quote Marilyn Butler) the academic reading-list needs
qualifying or replacing with a form of newspaper and journal-talk which
15
could be thought of as current language many recent essays have
focussed more intensively on Mary Shelleys and the novels relation to
the immediate discoveries and controversies of the contemporary scientific
world:
The fluid boundary between death and life a dominant theme in the
bio-medical sciences of this time was of such importance that
Frankenstein imagined that, in time, he might be able to renew life
where death had apparently devoted the body to corruption. The
belief that the boundary between life and death was reversible was
widely held at the time, indeed for most of the eighteenth century
there had been sustained interest in suspended animation, techniques
for reviving the drowned and the hanged, premature burial indeed
in any aspect of medicine that held out the hope that death could be
delayed, avoided, held at bay. Medical writers imagined doctors in a
16
quasi-divine role, shedding new light on natures processes.
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Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
Now I was led to examine the cause and progress of this decay, and
forced to spend days and nights in vaults and charnel houses. My
attention was fixed upon every object the most insupportable to the
delicacy of the human feelings. I saw how the fine form of man was
degraded and wasted; I beheld the corruption of death succeed to the
blooming cheek of life; I saw how the worm inherited the wonders of
the eye and brain. I paused, examining and analysing all the minuti
of causation, as exemplified in the change from life to death, and
death to life, until from the midst of this darkness a sudden light broke
in upon me . . . (p. 35)
So it is with the many other, less sensational studies that similarly move to
demystify the text in literary terms, to de-Romanticize it by bringing
it back into a precisely unsensational relation to the social and political
5
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quotidian. The point they make and remake is the point that Mary Shelley
herself stressed in her 1831 introduction, that invention does not consist
in creating out of void; that the materials must, in the first place, be
20
afforded. Of the revolutions effected in our understanding of
Frankenstein over the last thirty years, this move to demystify the story by
refiguring it within the rich context of those historical materials that were
afforded may well prove, because of historicisms own empirical
methodology, the most lasting.
II
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nor are the crimes and malevolence of the single Being, though indeed
withering and tremendous, the offspring of any unaccountable
propensity to evil, but flow irresistably from certain causes fully
adequate to their production. They are the children, as it were, of
Necessity and Human Nature. In this the direct moral of the book
consists, and it is perhaps the most important and of the most
universal application of any moral that can be enforced by example
Treat a person ill, and he will become wicked. Requite affection with
scorn; let one being be selected, for whatever cause, as the refuse of
his kind divide him, a social being, from society, and you impose
23
upon him the irresistable obligations malevolence and selfishness
7
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26
France (1790). Finally, Marie Roberts discovers an allegorical
specificity, not in the historical origins of the novel, but in the political
theory it proposes: The dialectic between Victor and the monster may be
understood in terms of Marxs theory of alienation, part of which concerns
mankinds alienation from the product of its labour, seen in the
estrangement of the monster from his maker. The ceature has the
characteristics of both worker and product, having been negated and
27
alienated by capitalist society.
8
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can always find ample objects and occasions, given that in any period
there is more going on than we can ever assimilate and organize
historically. In the early nineteenth century this was, if anything, only
more urgently and self-consciously the case. The fact that the Shelleys
and the Godwins were argumentatively and actively engaged in
contemporary political and print culture makes little that was said and
done during the period irrelevant to a genetics of Frankenstein. Not only is
criticism obliged to offer evidence, then, but it is obliged to offer it in the
face of the wealth of potentially relevant material that it has more or less
consciously excluded from consideration.
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III
The mother of its feminist or female readings, Ellen Moers was the
first to suggest that Frankenstein is a birth myth, and one that was lodged
in the novelists imagination, I am convinced, by the fact that she was
herself a mother. The obsession with birth is said to derive in large part
from Mary Shelleys traumatic experiences of loss in child birth first of
losing her mother, who died so soon after Mary Shelleys own birth, then
of losing children of her own as well as from her more general
knowledge of the potential dangers in pregnancy and giving birth faced by
women at the time. But it is especially in Victor Frankensteins
10
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in the motif of revulsion against newborn life, and the drama of guilt,
dread, and flight surrounding birth and its consequences. Most of the
novel, roughly two of its three volumes, can be said to deal with the
retribution visited upon monster and creator for deficient infant care.
Frankenstein seems to be distinctly a womans mythmaking on the
subject of birth precisely because its emphasis is not upon what
precedes birth, not upon birth itself, but upon what follows birth: the
35
trauma of afterbirth.
Few critics follow Moerss precise emphases and most try to avoid
the naively direct biographical equations she comes up with on occasion,
yet the freedom with which she turned to womens issues proved
liberating for feminist and non-feminist critical discussion of Frankenstein
alike. Moerss birth myth and Robert Kielys reading of Frankenstein as
a parable in which Victor Frankensteins hubris lies not in his usurping
the creative power of God, but in his attempt to usurp the power of
women became the central themes upon which feminist criticism worked
36
its variations, and feminism and psychoanalysis established a tacit
conspiracy that has required the recognition, at the very least, of all
subsequent criticism. In her reading of Frankensteins Circumvention of
the Maternal, Margaret Homans evolves the most searching and sustained
example of this synthesis:
11
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embody yet not embody male fantasies. At the same time, it expresses
a womans knowledge of the irrefutable independence of the body,
both her own and those of the children that she produces, from
37
projective male fantasy.
12
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This is orthodox in the sense of its picking up one of the oldest motifs of
Western literary culture in the overreacher, and orthodox also in the sense
that it casts the feminine in an existentially conservative, even timorous
role of the kind against which, again, Mary Wollstonecraft fought so
eloquently in her Vindication of the Rights of Woman. Indeed, insofar as
(to quote Christopher Small) Frankenstein himself is clearly and to some
extent must intentionally have been a portrayal of Shelley in a novel
45
which is a meditation on miscreants, then for proponents of this orthodox
46
reading like Mary Poovey, Ann Mellor, and Margaret Homans the
feminist critique is a conservative critique. In Shelley, according to Ann
Mellor, Mary Shelley perceived an intellectual hubris or belief in the
supreme importance of abstractions that led him to be insensitive to the
47
feelings of those who did not share his ideas and his enthusiasms.
13
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IV
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Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
more pressing an issue, as it turns out, in that in each case the mother is
either dead or non-existent. Writing in answer to her question Is There a
Woman in This Text?, Mary Jacobus rounds up the usual suspects: in
exchanging a woman for a monster, Victor Frankenstein prefers an
imagined over an actual being (Romantic egotism) which is also, as Victor
says, a being like myself (primal narcissism), one that is tellingly created
right after and thus in obvious compensation for the death of the
51
egoistically rejected mother. So for Margaret Homans, Frankenstein is
simultaneously about the death and obviation of the mother and about a
52
sons quest for a substitute object of desire. (In his film version of Mary
Shelleys Frankenstein, Kenneth Branagh has Frankenstein bring Elizabeth
back to life and dance with her a dance he had shared with his mother as a
child.) In one way or other, writes Peter Brooks, the radically absent
body of the mother more and more appears to be the problem that
53
cannot be solved in the novel.
Still on remarkably absent mothers, and like many others noting the
maternal associations of the nature into which Victor Frankenstein pries
and penetrates, Marc Rubenstein focusses his analysis on Mary Shelley
15
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
16
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
The absolutely Other, Frankensteins Monster has never been busier than
he is here, in Hogles psychomachia or battle of the soul. Rarely,
moreover, has he borne so ponderous a symbolic burden, for his condition
of being all of the betwixt-and-between . . . conditions of life is said
(again, after Julia Kristeva) to indicate the most primordial form of being
half-inside and half-outside :
17
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Like the Monster at its centre, the Frankenstein story can thus be
characterized as a radical heterogeneity that is inclusive enough to
contain any and every possible meaning.
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Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
So for Fred Botting, the text, like the monster, solicits and resists
attempts to determine a single line of significance, frustrating
the desires for authority that are represented in and resisted by the
text-monster. Identifying the novels fixed, singular and final meaning
by way of historical and biographical archives, [certain] readings
return to the unifying figure of the author as they attempt to authorize
their own accounts and arrest the monstrously overdetermined play of
significance that operates in and between criticisms pre-texts. Thus
they repeat Frankensteins project. But the monster, this time
Frankenstein, again eludes capture even as it sustains the pursuit.63
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The cynic might want to argue that to say that the readers attention is
driven by a desire to know that can never be satisfied completely is a
blinding truism, not only about the act of narrating and reading but also
about consciousness. And Brooks is aware of and slightly embarrassed by
this: One could no doubt say something similar about any narrative text.
What makes the narrative of Frankenstein special for Brooks, however, is
that, rather than being simply driven by a narrative whose principles it
exposes, Frankenstein is about the very principle of narrative as it is
for Beth Newman, only for Brooks it is narrative in its metonymical
forward movement, dramatising the fact and process of its transmission,
as framed tales always do.65 As an explanation of why it is that
Frankenstein especially should engender such a proliferation of
(necessarily inadequate) critical readings, Brookss reading is at once self-
affirming and curiously fatalistic: A monster is that which cannot be
placed in any of the taxonomic schemes devised by the human mind to
understand and to order nature. It exceeds the very basis of classification,
language itself: it is an excess of signification, a strange byproduct or
leftover of the process of making meaning.66 Because nothing exceeds
like excess, the number and reach of critical readings of Frankenstein must
be monstrous or disproportionate to anything signified by the text. As for
Botting and Musselwhite, Frankenstein must mean beyond its own
meaning.
Finally and more playfully, not only has the Monster been read
post-structurally, so to speak, it has also been read as a prototype or
prophecy of post-structuralism. According to Barbara Claire Freeman,
there is a prescience in the anti-Kantian monstrosity of the text that is
20
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Freemans invoking the popular genre of the campus horror film as a satire
on the overreaction in the humanities to the advent of theory, while it
good-humouredly endorses theorys deconstructive activities, also
succeeds in exposing weaknesses in those activities of which she appears
unconscious. Freeman, for example, unwittingly parodies the utterly
indiscriminate tendency of theory to discover in any number of historically
and generically distinct texts precisely the same preoccupation: its own.
And the mock-horror of the campus Monster turns against the way in
which the academy insists on writing its own existential anxieties large
across a culture that, in truth, remains indifferent to and puzzled by them.
VI
21
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
If, for the orthodox Freudian, he is a type of the unconscious, for the
Jungian he is a shadow, for the Lacanian an objet , for one Romantic
an spectre, for another a Blakean emanation; he has also been or
can be read as Rousseaus natural man, a Wordsworthian child of
nature, the isolated Romantic rebel, the misunderstood revolutionary
impulse, Mary Shelleys abandoned baby self, her abandoned babe, an
aberrant signifier, diffrence, or as a hypostasis of godless
presumption, the monstrosity of godless nature, analytical reasoning,
or alienating labour. Like the Creatures own mythic version of
himself, a freakish hybrid of Adam and Satan. 69
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More to the point, however, is the question of how we can turn this
excess of critical attention, not into a reading, but into an understanding of
the text. One obvious thing about Frankenstein, for example, is that
however convinced we may be about what the Monster symbolizes, say, or
about what Victor Frankenstein might represent, we neither expect nor
find that everything the two say and do conforms with that figuration.
Gilbert and Gubar pause, searchingly, over this elusiveness:
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ambiguity and the symbolic slipperiness which are at the heart of all
the characterizations in Frankenstein. In fact, it is probably these
continual and complex reallocations of meaning, among characters
whose histories echo and re-echo each other, that have been so
bewildering to critics. Like figures in a dream, all the people in
Frankenstein have different bodies and somehow, horribly, the same
face, or worse the same two faces.73
Arguably, then, there is simply too much going on for the novel not
to divide its critics according to their discrete interests and methods.
Indeed, we might want to go on from here to ask how far the profusion of
critical interpretations to which it has given rise testifies to a complex
suggestiveness, and how far to formal defect and intellectual irresolution.
For Marie Roberts, for example, Shelleyan aesthetics, Wollstonecraftian
feminism and Godwinian radicalism combine to produce a daughter of
the Enlightenment as ideologically hybrid and disparate as the very
creature pieced together by Victor Frankenstein; an amalgam of
conflicting elements destined to propagate both the unexpected and the
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25
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
NOTES
26
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27
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
5
Sandra A. Gilbert and Susan Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic:
The Woman Writer and the Nineeenth-Century Literary Imagination (New
Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1979), pp. 221-2.
6
Harold Bloom, Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, in his
The Ringers in the Tower: Studies in the Romantic Tradition (Chicago and
London: University of Chicago Press, 1971), pp. 119-129 (p. 122).
7
Mario Praz, The Romantic Agony [1933], trans. Angus Davidson,
second edition (London and New York: Oxford University Press, 1951;
1970), p. 116.
8
Robert Kiely, The Romantic Novel in England (Cambridge Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1972), p. 161.
9
D. W. Harding, The Character of Literature from Blake to Byron,
in From Blake to Byron, Pelican Guide to English Literature, Vol. 5
[1957], ed. Boris Ford (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1962), pp. 33-64 (p.
45).
10
Marilyn Butler, Frankenstein and Radical Science, Frankenstein,
Norton Critical Edition, p. 302.
11
Jerrold E. Hogle, Frankenstein as Neo-Gothic: From the Ghost of
the Counterfeit to the Monster of Abjection, in Romanticism, History, and
the Possibilities of Genre: Re-forming Literature 1789-1837, ed. Tilottama
Rajan and Julia M. Wright (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1998), pp. 177-210 (p. 192).
12
See the entry on Promise and Peril at the Frankenstein website
compiled by the US National Library of Medicine for its exhibition of
October 1997- August 1998, hhttp://www.nlm.nih.gov/
13
Tropp, Mary Shelleys Monster, pp. 2-3; 9.
14
Samuel Holmes Vasbinder, Scientific Attitudes in Mary Shelleys
Frankenstein (Ann Abor: UMI Research Press, 1984); Anne Mellors
28
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discussion comprises chapter 5 of her Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction,
Her Monsters (London: Methuen, 1988), pp. 89-114 (p. 107).
15
Butler, in the introduction to her edition of Frankenstein, Worlds
Classics, 1993, p. xvi.
16
Ludmilla Jordonova, Melancholy Reflection: Constructing an
Identity for Unveilers of Nature, in Frankenstein, Creation, and
Monstrosity, ed. Stephen Bann (London: Reaktion, 1994), pp. 60-76 (p.
66).
17
Jordonova, Melancholy Reflection, Frankenstein, Creation, and
Monstrosity, p. 67; 73 ff.
18
Frankenstein and Radical Science, in Frankenstein, Norton
Critical Edition, pp. 302-313 passim.
19
Tim Marshall, Murdering to Dissect: Grave-Robbing,
Frankenstein, and the Anatomy Literature (Manchester and New York:
Manchester University Press, 1995).
20
Frankenstein, Worlds Classics, ed. Butler, p. 195 (my italics).
21
See, e.g., Lee Sterrenberg, Mary Shelleys Monster: Politics and
Psyche in Frankenstein, in The Endurance of Frankenstein, pp. 143-171
(pp. 166 ff.) and Chris Baldick, In Frankensteins Shadow: Myth,
Monstrosity, and Nineteenth-Century Writing (Oxford: Clarendon, 1987),
passim.
22
William St Clair, The Godwins and the Shelleys: The Biography of
a Family (London: Faber and Faber, 1989), p. 437.
23
Shelley: Prose or the Trumpet of a Prophecy, ed. David Lee Clark
(London: Fourth Estate, 1988), pp. 306-7.
24
Fred Botting, Frankenstein and the Language of Monstrosity,
Reviewing Romanticism, ed. Philip W. Martin and Robin Jarvis (New
York: St. Martins Press, 1992), p. 51.
29
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25
Sterrenberg, Mary Shelleys Monster, The Endurance of
Frankenstein, p. 156.
26
Baldick, In Frankensteins Shadow, chapter 2, The Politics of
Monstrosity, pp. 10-29.
27
Marie Roberts, Mary Shelley: Immortality, Gender and the Rosy
Cross, in Reviewing Romanticism, pp. 60-8 (p. 62).
28
OFlinn, Production and Reproduction, Frankenstein: New
Casebooks, p. 24.
29
Mellor, Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters, p. 89.
30
Gilbert and Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic, p. 242.
31
Pamela Clemit, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley in Literature of the
Romantic Period: A Bibliographical Guide, ed. Michael ONeill (Oxford:
Clarendon, 1998), pp. 284-97 (p. 289).
32
Gilbert and Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic, p. 235.
33
Cp. Meena Alexander, Women in Romanticism (Basingstoke and
London: Macmillan, 1989): Forced right from its inception into a posture
of marginality . . . the creature bit by bit is forced to discover itself as a
monster: its being for itself determined by the gaze of others. /And so
begins one of the most painful of Romantic educations, one that only a
woman, a slave or a colonised subject could imagine (p. 129).
34
Gilbert and Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic, p. 232.
35
Ellen Moers, Female Gothic, in The Endurance of Frankenstein,
pp. 77-87 (pp. 79; 81).
36
Kiely, The Romantic Novel in England, p. 164.
30
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
37
Margaret Homans, Bearing Demons: Frankensteins
Circumvention of the Maternal, in Duncan Wu (ed.), Romanticism: A
Critical Reader (Oxford: Blackwell, 1995), pp. 379-400 (pp. 380; 382).
38
Gilbert and Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic, pp. 221 and 230;
222-3.
39
U. C. Knoepflmacher, Thoughts on the Aggression of Daughters
in his and Levines The Endurance of Frankenstein, pp. 88-119 (p. 105).
40
Stephen Behrendt, Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, and the Woman
Writers Fate, in Romantic Women Writers: Voices and Countervoices,
ed. Paula R. Feldman and Theresa M. Kelley (Hanover and London:
University Press of New England, 1995), pp. 69-87 (p. 69).
41
Kate Ellis, Monsters in the Garden: Mary Shelley and the
Bourgeois Family, in The Endurance of Frankenstein, pp. 123-42 (pp.
131-2).
42
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Three Womens Texts and a Critique
of Imperialism, Frankenstein: New Casebooks, p. 248.
43
Gilbert and Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic, pp. 243; 221.
44
Mary Poovey, My Hideous Progeny: The Lady and the
Monster, in her The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer: Ideology as
Style in the Works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley, and Jane Austen
(Chicago and London: Chicago University Press, 1984), pp. 114-142 (p.
123).
45
Christopher Small, Ariel Like a Harpy: Shelley, Mary and
Frankenstein (London: Victor Gollancz, 1972), pp. 101 & ff.
46
Homans, Bearing Demons, Romanticism: A Critical Reader, pp.
385-6.
47
Mellor, Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters, p. 73.
31
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
48
Paul A. Cantor, Creature and Creator: Myth-Making in English
Romanticism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984), p. 109.
49
David Musselwhite, Partings Welded Together: Politics and Desire
in the Nineteenth-Century Novel (London and New York: Methuen, 1987),
p. 49.
50
Joseph Kestner, Narcissism as Symptom and Structure: The Case
of Mary Shelleys Frankenstein, in Frankenstein: New Casebooks, pp.
68-80 (p. 76-77).
51
Mary Jacobus, Is There a Woman in This Text?, New Literary
History, XIV (1982-3), pp. 117-141 (p. 131).
52
Homans, Bearing Demons, Romanticism: A Critical Reader, p.
379.
53
Peter Brooks, What Is a Monster? (According to Frankenstein),
Frankenstein: New Casebooks, pp. 81-106 (p. 92).
54
Marc A. Rubenstein, My Accursd Origin: The Search for the
Mother in Frankenstein, Studies in Romanticism XV (1976), pp. 165-194
(pp. 174-5; 177).
55
Knoepflmacher, Thoughts on the Aggression of Daughters, The
Endurance of Frankenstein, pp. 105; 103 and passim.
56
Kestner, Narcissism as Symptom and Structure, Frankenstein:
New Casebooks, p. 72.
57
Tropp, Mary Shelleys Monster, p. 37. Double Vision, the third
chapter of Tropps Mary Shelleys Monster (pp. 34-51), offers a brief
compendium of psychoanalytic thinking on the issue.
58
George Levine, The Ambiguous Heritage of Frankenstein, in his
and Knoepflmachers The Endurance of Frankenstein, pp. 3-30 (p. 14).
32
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59
Cantor, Creature and Creator, p. 117.
60
Hogle, Frankenstein as Neo-Gothic, Romanticism, History, and
the Possibilities of Genre, pp. 186-7; 195.
61
Beth Newman, Narratives of Seduction and the Seduction of
Narrative: The Frame Structure of Frankenstein, Frankenstein: New
Casebooks, pp. 166-90 (pp. 171-2; 168).
62
Gilbert and Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic, p. 233.
63
Botting, Frankenstein and the Language of Monstrosity,
Reviewing Romanticism, pp. 53-4. Cp. Musselwhite, Partings Welded
Together, pp. 58-9; 65.
64
Botting, Frankenstein and the Language of Monstrosity,
Reviewing Romanticism, pp. 55; 56.
65
Brooks, What Is a Monster?, Frankenstein: New Casebooks, pp.
91; 96.
66
Brooks, What Is a Monster?, Frankenstein: New Casebooks, p.
100.
67
Barbara Claire Freeman, Frankenstein with Kant: A Theory of
Monstrosity or the Monstrosity of Theory, in Frankenstein: New
Casebooks, pp. 191-205 (pp. 200-1).
68
The phrase is Chris Baldicks, In Frankensteins Shadow, p. 56.
69
Paul Sherwin, Frankenstein: Creation as Catastrophe, in Mary
Shelleys Frankenstein: Modern Critical Interpretations, ed. Harold
Bloom (New York, New Haven, Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 1987), pp.
27-54 (p. 40).
70
Fred Botting, in the introduction to his edition Frankenstein: New
Casebooks, p. 1.
33
Sydney Studies Critical Metamorphoses of Frankenstein
71
Barbara Johnson, My Monster/My Self, in her A World of
Difference (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press,
1987), pp. 144-54 (p. 146).
72
Umberto Eco et al., Interpretation and Overinterpretation, ed.
Stephan Collini (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), p. 48.
73
Gilbert and Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic, p. 229.
74
Pamela Clemits study of Frankenstein in the context precisely of
the Godwinian novel explores a formal, literary relationship that many
take for granted but leave untouched; see her The Godwinian Novel: The
Rational Fictions of Godwin, Brockden Brown, Mary Shelley (Oxford:
Clarendon, 1993).
75
Roberts, Mary Shelley: Immortality, Gender and the Rosy Cross,
Reviewing Romanticism, p. 60.
76
Botting, Frankenstein and the Language of Monstrosity,
Reviewing Romanticism, pp. 55.
77
Edith Birkhead, The Tale of Terror: A Study of the Gothic Romance
[1921] (New York: Russell & Russell, 1963), p. 165.
78
Gillian Beer, Darwins Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin,
George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century Fiction (London: Routledge and
Kegan Paul, 1985), p. 110.
79
The second of two sentences the first is Frankenstein makes a
living creature out of bits of corpses used by Chris Baldick to sum up
the mythic action of Frankenstein, In Frankensteins Shadow, p. 3.
34