The
autobiographical dimension in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
The
enduring apple of Mary Shelley’s novel is evidently to do with indeterminacy
and ambivalence Hurt is, its textual “monstrosity” as a composition that amalgamates
oppositional and allegedly irreconcilable the old and new life and death,
maleness and femaleness horror and enthusiasm fantasy and tragic inescapably
of biographical fact. In her introduction to the revised 1831 addition, Mary
Shelley sets the tone for the novel as a whole when divided emotionally between
affectionate fondness and nauseous repulsion she sees Frankenstein simultaneously
as her “hide ous progeny” and “the off spring of happy days”.
Haunted
by birth and death :
This ambivalent
attitude of the author towards her works mirrors the disastrous turmoil of Mary
Shelley’s own experiences with procreation. Significantly, in both her life and fiction, every birth manifests
it self a potential catastrophe, with the body new born shockingly
transmogrified into the monstrous corpse awaiting resuscitation in its mothers dream
following the death of her first, prematurely born daughter in Feb. 1815,Mary
Shelley noted in her journal “dream that my little come to life again-that it had
only been could and that we rubbed it by the fire and it lived-I awake and find
no body-I think about the little thing all day,”
Given such documentary evidence,
it is not difficult to detect pertinent resemblance between the stories of Frankenstein
on the one hand Mary Shelley’s biography on the other. haunted by her baby’s
death and vainly conjuring possibilities of reviving her, Mary Shelley was also
deeply traumatized by the knowledge of her own mothers death giving birth to
her, it seems important to note her that life may Shelley felt responsible for
causing the demise of her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft godwin,who was a woman of
strong political convictions and the author of A Vindication of the rights of
woman 1792,which become the conceptual cornerstone of the 19th
century British feminist movement.
Impetus for the story:
Frankenstein’s central vision of an artificial reanimation of the dead
may well finds it roots in the author’s painfully loss of her mother and first –born child, which may also explain
the novel’s intensity of feeling as well as it is sudden mood swings from
paternal love to guilt and disgust, and from filial subservience to anger and
resentment. However it took a causal story writing competation between Mary,
her husband Percy and lord Byron and Byron’s friend john polidori for her willful
fantasy to surface and take narrative shape.
In the summer of 1816 kept indoors by incident weather,
the Shelly’s spent much time at their neighbors Byron's Villa Diodatiat Cologry
on lake Lean in Switzerland, where the friends kept themselves amused by
reading ghost stories to each other and discussion the political and scientific
topics of the day. Percy Shelley and Lord BYRON were particularly intrigued by
the possibility of ensuring lifeless matter by means of electricity, which was
widely regarded as the force most likely to generate and sustain life. When
finally the friends decided to write a host story each and see whose was the
most chilling and terrifying, Mary shelly came up with Frankenstein a tale that
owed much to her own life story as to the scientific queries amdavad fanciful
ideas entertained by the men closest to her.
However
not only the scientific themes and pressing emotional issues that inform Frankenstein
are inspired by the author’s real-life experience and circumstances. According
to Chris Baldick in Frankenstein shadow: myth monstrosity and 19th century
writing the autobiographical dimension of Frankenstein is perhaps most
conspicuous in the novel's manifold references to marry Shelly’s immediate
family amd friends. Pointing out that the narrate of sense of the character
novel are drawn from Marry Shelley acquaintance Baldish writers.
“Elizabeth
was the name of Percy Shelley’s sister and his mother and victor was a name
adopted in beyond by Percy himself a fact which has encouraged some
commentators to identify him too hastily with victor Frankenstein when his
portrait is given more clearly in the character of Henry Clerval. William was
the name just not of Mary Shelley’s father but also her half brother and of the
son she was raising while writing the novel”
Patriarchal
Pressure:-
According to majority of the
critics, Mary Shelley’s greatest achievement resides in her novel’s allegorical
multi-affectedness which renders references of an intimately person nature part
of larger historical metaphor that accentuates the universal applicability of
Frankenstein as a moral table. Thus, an investigation into the author’s
character and the circumstances surrounding the gensis of her tale opens us to a
general problematisation of the 19th century woman writer’s
irresolvable divison between her masculine aspirations on the hand and feminine
duties on the other. Also as the product of a writing competition between three
men and one woman, Frankenstein takes shape under constant male probing or to
put it more acutely barely tolerable patriarchal pressure. “Have you thought of
a story? I was asked each morning” Marry Shelley writers “and each morning I
was forced to reply with a mortifying negative.” Invariably it seems in Frankenstein
the personal becomes political while the biographical subsumes history and
fantasy feed on the hypotheses of contemporary scientific conjecture.
Critique
of Godwin and Percy Shelley:-
It
is widely understood that to some degree Frankenstein is a critique of William
Godwin and Percy Shelley. This is grounded in such particular as the ironic
conjunction the books impersonal dedication to Godwin and its epigraph from
Milton which suggests a deep ambivalence on Mary Shelley's part towards Godwin
and the use of Percy Shelley's teenage reading in Paracelsus and Albert Magnus
and his juvenile pseudonym Victor scarcity of biographical maternal that would
allow Godwin and Shelley to serve as the prototype of a father - figure who
abandons his creation. Her comments that "my father from age and domestic
circumstances & other thing would not me fair valor " seems to refer
to the time after Shelley's death, and it is in any event a very short and
qualified criticism. The complicated circumstances that may have led her to
blame Shelley at least in part for Clara Shelley's death occurred well after
the writing of Frankenstein. But there was enough in her to have the monster
generalize in reality muted tones on the difference between maternal and
paternal behavior.
"I heard of the differences of sexes of the
birth and growth of children how the father devoted on the infant and the
lively sallies of the older child how all the life and cares of the mother were
wrapt up the precious charge".
Rousseau:-
For the more extreme instance of neglect we need to turn
from Godwin and Shelley to Rousseau to Mary Shelley knowledge abandoned his
five children by Therese le vesper to the Parisian founding Hospital. She wrote
about this with some heat for an encyclopedia of French author.
Mary
Shelley’s Challenge Rousseau’s primitivism echoes some of her mothes
differences with Rousseau. Wollstonecraft maintained a faith in god and reason
that provided a metaphysical foundation for believe Rousseau to be
ontologically wrong in his description of nature.
The
two traits that Rousseau attributes to the human animal in a precivilized state
are self –preservation and compassion. As he says in the second discourse he
finds two principles prior to reason one of them intersecting us in our own
welfare and preservation.., and the other exciting a natural language any of
our own species suffer pain or death. These traits can easily be discovered in
Mary Shelley’s monster. The monster does not came into existence tabula rasa
but begins to show a Rousseau inner being in his first reaction to light and
darkness.
A
stronger light pressed upon my nerves so that I was obliged to0 shut my eyes.
Darkness then came over me and troubled me; but hardly had I felt this when by
opening my eyes as I now suppose the light poured in upon me again.
The
first response to light is entirely psychological but this is not so in the
reaction to darkness. There is no physical pain associated with darkness the
monster is simply troubled-As this passage echoes Adam’s first awakening to
consciousness.
Oh, that I had forever remained in my native wood,
nor known or felt beyond the sensations of hunger thirst and heat!
Of what a strange nature is knowledge! it clings to
the mind when it has once seized on it like a lichen on the rock. I wished
sometimes to shake of all thought and feeling; but I learned that there was but
one means to overcome the sensation of pain that was death- a state which I
feared yet did not understand.
The
monsters first shows his capacity for compassion when he refuses to take food
from the de Lacey's supplies once he realize that by doing so he causes them
hardship. This is the best argument for the original goodness of the monsters
for in this case the two primal Rousseau instincts collide and the monster
chooses to exercise composition even as it conflicts with his own self
preservation.
The
central enigma of Frankenstein is the evolution of this Benign creature into a
child-murder and in sketching this development Mary Shelley uses Rousseau
principles but she shows an even more fluid transitions between the attributes
of the natural man and the social being than Rousseau did in his discourse. It
could well be the case that rhetorical purpose has to Some degree dictated
content in both Rousseau Discourses and Frankenstein Rousseau was addressing
question posed by the French Academy that called for a conceptual opposition
between nature and civilization while Mary Shelley was showing the development
of a single individual. In any event it seems clear in Frankenstein that the
natural instinct to compassion leads directly to the desire for social
relations in the monsters dealing with the de laceys any such connection is far
more difficult to establish in Rousseau. The psychological ground of Frankenstein
becomes even more complicate when Mary Shelley effaces distinction made by Rousseau
between amour de soi meme and amour proper.
Critics
of Frankenstein who have seen in the novel an ethical core of condemnation of
victor Frankenstein for his overreaching and his observation self glorification
have underestimate the equivocality of Mary Shelly on this subject. It should
be kept in mind that the most powerful influence for a strong sense of self
respect in Mary Shelley's life was the life and writing of Mary Wollstonecraft
who argued strongly that the acquisition of a sense of self aspect was the only
means by which women and children could escape being degraded by the
institutions of the patriarchal family. Those who wish to see victor Frankenstein
unequivocally condemned sometimes make wanton a foil to his obsession. This
point is made by U.C.Knoep film maker:
the only
surviving male speaker of the novel. Walton possesses what the Monster lacks
and Frankenstein denies an internalized female complementary principles. Walton
begins his account through self justification letters to a female ego idea his
sister Margaret Seville... The memory of this civilizing and restraining
woman... Helps him resist Frankenstein’s destructive course. Frankenstein and
the Monster are joint murders of little William, Justine clever Alphonse
Frankenstein and Elizabeth Walton however refuses to bring death to his crew.
When Mary Shelley
derived from Rousseau the belief that the most characteristic part of human
nature is his affection and showed the operations of these affections in Frankenstein
she created characters whose psychologies were inextricably mixtures of
altruism and narcissism. Walton identifies the reason for his journey both as a
desire for glory and for the inestimable benefits which I shall confer on all
mankind. The monsters first reaction to hearing himself described by the de lacers
as a good spirit is to become more active in seeking to discover why flex
appeared so miserable. This is his account of his motivation in the creation of
the monster:
No one can conceive the
variety of feelings which bore me onwards like a hurricane, in the first
enthusiasm of success. Life and death appeared to me idea bound which I should first
break through and poor torrents of light into our dark world. A new species
would bless me as its creator and sources many happy and excellent natures
would owe their being to me. No father could claims the gratitude of his child as
completely as i should deserve i their. Pursuing this reflection. I thought
that if i could bestow animation upon lifeless matter. I might in process of
time renew life where death had apparently devoted the body to corruption.
The notion that
Frankenstein can be given an ethical core through the vehicle of polarized
ideology that criticizes Milton Godwin Shelley Rousseau or other cannot easily
accommodate the identification of the overreaching scientific with the most
altruistic part of Mary Shelley. But the dream of the recovered baby also
showed her the force of the desire behind that illusion.
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