Frankenstein: Self, Body, Creation and Monstrosity
Author(s) -
Özdemir ERİNÇ
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
ankara üniversitesi dil ve tarih-coğrafya fakültesi dergisi
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2459-0150
pISSN - 0378-2905
DOI - 10.1501/dtcfder_0000000160
Subject(s) - art
This study aims to explore the themes and concepts of self, body, creation and monstrosity inscribed in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. it will approach these issues from a mainly posmodern point of view that takes gender as its central focus. Although gender is not an explicit theme in the novel, it plays an enormous part in ehıcidating the deeper meanings embedded at its heart, and is woven into its fabric in a multi-layered manner that can be roughly summarized as follows: 1) as a rewriting of Paradise Lost as a masculinist text and as a Romantic version of culturally central mytlıs such as the creation myth and the Promethean myth in ways that covertly question Romantic notions of şelf and creativity; 2) in connection with some of the most influential cultural and philosophical discourses of Shelley's time such as Godwinian rationalism, the Enlightenment belief in the beneficience of selence and human progress and Rousseau 's Romanticism, ali of which deal with "civilized" man's relationship to nature, to society and to himself; 3) in relation to the domestic ideology that constituted a majör cultural basis of the eighteenthand nineteenth-century middle-classs domination; 4) as an inseription of crucial aspects of Shelley's own life such as parental loss and ambivalence about her gender role in relation to her artistle şelf; 5) through the narrative marginalization of the female characters refleeting the sodalı'cultural marginalization ofwoman.
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