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Frankenstein Videos 17 videos

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...

Frankenstein: Getting to Know Victor
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Is Victor Frankenstein a: Romantic Hero? b: Byronic Hero? c: Satanic Hero? d: Guitar Hero? All of the above (but maybe not D…) We donâ€...

Frankenstein: Gothic Tones
8809 Views

What is Gothic Romanticism? It's when two goths fall in love. Duh. Wait, that’s not what it is? Oh. We should probably watch the video and figure...

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Frankenstein: Who was Mary Shelley? 720 Views


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Description:

No HBO! Well then, how does a horror short story writing contest sound? And the winner is *drum roll* Mary Shelley! You go girl! And that is how Frankenstein came into fruition. Want to know more about Mary Shelley and Frankenstein? Click on the video to learn more!


Transcript

00:00

Edited at https://subtitletools.com

00:01

We speak student!

00:04

Frankenstein

00:05

A la Shmoop

00:06

An Introduction

00:09

So this is Frankenstein a la Shmoop, the course. [ Narrator David introduces Deb]

00:12

And we're here with Deb Tennen,

00:13

who runs our creative, and bunch of editorial stuff,

00:16

and like 87 other things at Shmoop.

00:18

So we're gonna talk to Deb about Frankenstein.

00:21

She's a PHD in literature and knows this stuff cold. [Frankenstein appears on screen]

00:24

Who was Mary Shelley?

00:27

Mary Shelley was 18 [Photos of Mary Shelley appears]

00:29

when this all happened.

00:30

So we think of her as kind of like a young kid,

00:32

but in reality, she was engaging with [Frankenstein movie plays]

00:36

some of the biggest intellectuals of the time.

00:38

We're talking early 1800s here.

00:40

Her mother was Mary Wollstonecraft, [Photos of Wollstonecraft displayed]

00:43

who you probably know from having written

00:45

the first feminist treatise in the English language,

00:49

or proto-feminist, I guess -

00:50

A Vindication of the Rights of Women.

00:53

And then her father was William Godwin... [Photos of William Godwin appears]

00:56

Everyone was named William back then,

00:58

so I'm just gonna assume that was his name, too.

00:59

And he was just a super famous anarchist atheist, [Symbols of anarchist atheist pop up]

01:04

kind of like crazy intellectual.

01:05

So she was brought up in a family of intellectuals,

01:08

and that's what was going on in her life when she wrote Frankenstein.

01:13

It's alive! It's alive! [Frankenstein resurrects]

01:15

The origin story of Frankenstein is actually really awesome.

01:18

She married Percy Shelley,

01:20

who was a super famous Romantic poet, [Percy Shelly ponders]

01:22

became Mary Shelley.

01:23

And she and Percy and a bunch of other Romantics,

01:26

like John Polidori and Lord Byron, [John Polidori and Lord Byron names pop up]

01:28

were hanging out in Switzerland. [Arrow points to Switzerland on map]

01:31

They were on a lake when it was terrible weather,

01:33

and Lord Byron was like, "Oh, hey,

01:35

you know what we should do? We're super bored.

01:36

Let's have a ghost story contest."

01:38

So they all wrote ghost stories [Lord Byron talks to John Polidori]

01:40

trying to take the crown of who could write -

01:42

of all these amazing Romantic authors -

01:44

who could write the best ghost story.

01:47

Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein. [Mary Shelley decides to write Frankenstein]

01:49

[ horror theme ]

01:51

It started as a short story.

01:52

Needless to say, she won the ghost story contest.

01:55

She turned the story into a novel. [Mary Shelley with her novel]

01:58

In 1818,

02:00

it was first published.

02:01

Critics did not like it.

02:03

And then in 1831, it was republished [Critics smash tomatoes at Mary Shelley]

02:06

with the help of her husband, Percy,

02:08

who kind of fluffed up the language a bit [Mary Shelley and Percy discuss about Frankenstein novel]

02:10

and changed a few things.

02:12

For the purposes of this course,

02:13

and kind of just generally

02:14

when we're talking about Frankenstein,

02:16

most people are referring to that later version. [Both novel and comics of Frankenstein displayed on screen]

02:18

Wow, that's fascinating.

02:18

So, Mary was 18 years old when she wrote this.

02:21

Now, they were typically grandmothers by age 18?

02:23

- Yeah, she had actually given birth twice by that point. - Oh, my God.

02:27

Yeah, we'll talk about that in respect to a few other things, for sure.

02:31

Contemporaneous environment --

02:34

They were in Switzerland in 1800. [Map of Lake Geneva in Switzerland appears on the screen]

02:37

It was what, politically? [Map of Switzerland where Mary stayed]

02:39

A melting pot for intellectuals?

02:40

- Because this sounds like the all-star team, - Yeah.

02:43

you know, of writers and creative people of that era.

02:46

Yeah, this is kind of again showing how Mary Shelley [All the famous writers pop up on the screen]

02:49

was really part of the core group of Romantics.

02:52

And we'll talk a little bit more about Romanticism. [A boy eating an apple and Mary Shelley pops up from the apple]

02:54

But she was the woman in -- As you heard,

02:57

the names I was saying - John, Percy, et cetera. [Mary Shelley shows her bicep]

02:59

She was the woman among this group of men,

03:01

and that actually is incredibly important when analyzing Frankenstein -

03:04

to think about, you know,

03:06

how does that change it? [A girls talks to Frankenstein by the lake]

03:08

The fact that this is written from a woman's voice

03:11

and not a man's voice like almost everything else [Frankenstein gazes himself in the mirror]

03:14

at the time was being written.

03:15

[ glass breaks ] [Frankenstein hits the mirror and breaks it]

03:18

What type of literary work is Frankenstein?

03:22

Frankenstein is an interesting melting pot of [Characteristics of Frankenstein displayed on the screen]

03:26

kind of Enlightenment thought,

03:28

Romanticism, Gothicism.

03:31

And we'll define all these terms.

03:33

Whereas, you know, Percy Shelley and Lord Byron [Percy Shelley and Lord Byron stands besides each other]

03:36

are really thought of as

03:38

definite Romantic poets.

03:40

When you think of, "Who are the big six?", [Photos of the great six contemporary writers appears]

03:42

you get Lord Byron, Shelley,

03:44

some others that I'm not remembering blank.

03:47

[ laughs ] And then a bunch of other people named William.

03:50

Then you have Mary Shelley's work,

03:53

which is really just like

03:54

pulls from all different angles. [Hands stretches from Frankenstein novel]

03:56

So it is very different to analyze a poem by Percy Shelley

04:01

and Frankenstein.

04:02

Although, Percy Shelley did have a lot of input into Frankenstein. [Image of Percy Shelley is displayed on screen]

04:06

And that's kind of a little bit of the controversy

04:07

around the book, is like,

04:09

how much of this did Mary actually write?

04:11

Maybe she wrote the short story and Percy

04:13

actually turned it into,

04:15

you know, the full novel. [Pen with some notes appear in candle light]

04:16

Oh, interesting.

04:17

So the idea of a bunch of people sitting around

04:19

telling ghost stories as entertainment

04:21

for an evening - a little different [Mary Shelley reciting ghost story with hand gestures]

04:23

from society today.

04:24

- But that was probably normalcy in those days, right? - Yeah.

04:27

They would entertain...

04:28

Yeah, I mean, they had nothing else to do,

04:30

so they would just write stories. [John and George talks about technical issues while Mary Shelley and Percy listens]

04:31

- Yeah, HBO wasn't... - Exactly, this is why we have,

04:34

you know, hundreds and hundreds of poems and stories

04:37

from that time, yeah. [Board shows Frankenstein introduction]

04:40

Who was Mary Shelley?

04:41

Why does it help to know Shelley's background?

04:43

What was the origin of Frankenstein?

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