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Playlist Frankenstein: Shmoopversations 14 videos
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Dearest Shmooper, Watch the video to find out more about the epistolary, layered, narrative of Frankenstein. Or watch a cute kitten video on Yout...
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Frankenstein: The Narrative Structure of Frankenstein 13039 Views
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Dearest Shmooper, Watch the video to find out more about the epistolary, layered, narrative of Frankenstein. Or watch a cute kitten video on Youtube. We won’t judge you if you do that. We might do the same. Sincerely, Shmoop
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:04
There's a curse on our village.
- 00:06
The curse of Frankenstein!
- 00:08
Frankenstein a la Shmoop
- 00:11
What is the narrative structure of Frankenstein?
Full Transcript
- 00:16
So the narrative structure of Frankenstein
- 00:17
is incredibly complicated.
- 00:19
It's part of why it's so fun to read.
- 00:22
First, let's talk about why it's written in the form of letters.
- 00:24
Any novel that's written in letter form
- 00:27
is called an epistolary novel.
- 00:29
This word "epistle" just means "letter."
- 00:31
It's like another fancy word for saying "letter."
- 00:34
At the time, most novels were written in epistolary form.
- 00:37
This isn't -- It wasn't something new.
- 00:39
Clarissa, Pamela, Dracula -
- 00:41
These were all epistolary novels.
- 00:44
The reason that stories were written in an epistolary fashion
- 00:49
is because it made it seem a little bit more real.
- 00:52
We come across a letter and it's like,
- 00:55
"Oh, well, someone wrote this letter."
- 00:57
And it kind of gives us the sense that what's happening
- 00:59
is a little truer.
- 01:01
You know, in reality TV, you can have
- 01:03
a shaky camera and stuff like that
- 01:05
to make it feel more real.
- 01:06
- What they did is they had epistolary -- - That was their confessional.
- 01:09
Exactly. You know, even novels that weren't
- 01:11
straight-up letters would start with some frame story.
- 01:15
So the frame story is, you know,
- 01:16
the story that surrounds the actual kind of plot of the novel.
- 01:21
And a lot of novels had this frame story
- 01:23
that would be like,
- 01:24
"Oh, I stumbled across a journal
- 01:27
and that's how I'm getting all this information."
- 01:29
And then they tell the story.
- 01:30
And it just gives it a little bit more sense of reality.
- 01:33
Frankenstein is a particularly cool one
- 01:35
because it's not just letters,
- 01:37
it is so many layers of narrative.
- 01:40
So at one point in the novel,
- 01:42
you have --
- 01:44
The De Laceys are hanging out
- 01:46
and the monster is telling their story
- 01:50
and Victor Frankenstein is quoting the monster's story
- 01:57
to Walton on the boat,
- 02:00
who's recording it and writing it to his sister.
- 02:03
So you have, like, I don't know,
- 02:05
- Phone tag. - Walton's sister... Exactly!
- 02:07
It's phone tag.
- 02:07
It's Walton's sister, Walton,
- 02:09
Victor Frankenstein, Frankenstein, and the De Laceys.
- 02:12
So you have like four or five layers of narration here.
- 02:15
And, yeah, like you're saying, it's kind of this idea that
- 02:18
by the time it gets to Walton's sister,
- 02:20
how much of it is real anymore?
- 02:22
So it's kind of this fun, you know,
- 02:24
tug of war between, "Oh, it's real.
- 02:26
It's letters. It's written in epistolary form."
- 02:28
and then it's like, "Oh, but, you know,
- 02:30
it went through six layers of narration to get there."
- 02:33
Hmm. Okay, cool. Highly filtered.
- 02:35
[ mm ]
- 02:36
[ suspenseful music ]
- 02:37
[ screaming ]
- 02:40
What is an epistolary novel?
- 02:42
What is the advantage of writing in this form?
- 02:45
When it comes to Frankenstein,
- 02:47
what is the drawback of this form?
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