Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelley began writing
“Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus” when she was eighteen years
old, two years after she’d become pregnant with her first child, a baby
she did not name. “Nurse the baby, read,” she had written in her diary,
day after day, until the eleventh day: “I awoke in the night to give it
suck it appeared to be sleeping so quietly that I would not awake it,”
and then, in the morning, “Find my baby dead.” With grief at that loss
came a fear of “a fever from the milk.” Her breasts were swollen,
inflamed, unsucked; her sleep, too, grew fevered. “Dream that my little
baby came to life again; that it had only been cold, and that we rubbed
it before the fire, and it lived,” she wrote in her diary. “Awake and
find no baby.”
Pregnant again only weeks later,
she was likely still nursing her second baby when she started writing
“Frankenstein,” and pregnant with her third by the time she finished.
She didn’t put her name on her book—she published “Frankenstein”
anonymously, in 1818, not least out of a concern that she might lose
custody of her children—and she didn’t give her monster a name, either.
“This anonymous androdaemon,” one reviewer called it. For the first
theatrical production of “Frankenstein,” staged in London in 1823 (by
which time the author had given birth to four children, buried three,
and lost another unnamed baby to a miscarriage so severe that she nearly
died of bleeding that stopped only when her husband had her sit on
ice), the monster was listed on the playbill as “––––––.”..
Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelley took pains that readers’ sympathies
would lie not only with Frankenstein, whose suffering is dreadful, but
also with the creature, whose suffering is worse. The art of the book
lies in the way Shelley nudges readers’ sympathy, page by page,
paragraph by paragraph, even line by line, from Frankenstein to the
creature, even when it comes to the creature’s vicious murders, first of
Frankenstein’s little brother, then of his best friend, and, finally,
of his bride. Much evidence suggests that she succeeded. “The justice is
indisputably on his side,” one critic wrote in 1824, “and his
sufferings are, to me, touching to the last degree.”..
Likewise, the creature comes of age when he finds Frankenstein’s
notebook, recounting his experiment, and learns how he was created, and
with what injustice he has been treated. It’s at this moment that the
creature’s tale is transformed from the autobiography of an infant to
the autobiography of a slave... Given Mary Shelley’s reading of books that stressed the physical
distinctiveness of Africans, her depiction of the creature is explicitly
racial, figuring him as African, as opposed to European.
Excerpts from a worthwhile longread at
The New Yorker. This year marks the bicentennial of the novel's 1818 publication, so expect many reprints, studies, and tributes.
In this bicentennial year, a good way to celebrate would be to read Frankenstein in Baghdad, by Ahmed Saadawi. It won the International Prize for Arabic Fiction and has just been published in English translation.
ReplyDeleteIn the novel, a man collects unidentified body parts after a series of car bombings in Baghdad, and stitches them together in his home, as a despairing way of giving a complete body to murdered victims, a way for their tragedy to be seen. But when the soul of a hotel guard, whose body was vaporized in a car bomb attack, enters that stitched body and animates it . . . let's just say it's a chilling development.
Interesting. Thanks.
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