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Mary Shelley and Frankenstein

Page history last edited by Robert W. Maloy 4 years, 6 months ago

Mary Shelley, 1820Mary Shelley, 1820

 

Topics on the Page

 

Biography of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

 

Frankenstein: or the Modern Prometheus

 

Multimedia Resources

 

Teaching Resources

 

Cloning

 

The Search for the Northwest Passage

 

 

 

Biography Resources

 

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797-1851)


See also, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley from Brandeis University

Mary Shelley 213th Birthday Google Doodle, August 30, 2010

She finished writing the novel "Frankenstein" when she was 19 years-old.

Her mother was Mary Wollstonecraft, an early women's rights advocate who died days after her birth.

She married the poet Percy Shelley. Their love affair is depicted in a 2017 movie, "A Storm in the Stars", in which she was played by the Hollywood actress Elle Fanning

 

 

The image is based on the first stage production of Frankenstein in London in 1823.

T.P. Cooke as Frankenstein's monster, 1823
T.P. Cooke as Frankenstein's monster, 1823

 

Frankenstein: or the Modern Prometheus

  • Published March 11, 1818
  • First Science Fiction Novel
  • Popular symbol of feminist literature

 

Editions of FrankensteinEditions of Frankenstein

 

 

Read the text of novel online


Hear the novel read aloud on Librivox

The Shelley-Goodwin Archive: Frankenstein

  • Shows the drafting process for the novel and the collaborative writing process of the Shelley family
  • Has pictures of primary source documents and typed text to translate handwriting

 

 

Multimedia Resources

 

Poster from the 1931 film Frankenstein
Poster from the 1931 film Frankenstein


It's Alive: 1931 Frankenstein Movie Clip staring Boris Karloff

Frankenstein on the Silver Screen has still images from the movies



Did Climate Inspire the Birth of a Monster? NPR, August 13, 2007. This podcast explored how weather, namely the Mount Tambora volcano eruption in Indonesia created the dark and stormy atmosphere depicted in the novel.

PHI Hartman Frankenstein Sketches from Saturday Night Live

 

Teaching Resources

 

Google Lit Trips - Frankenstein


Teaching Frankenstein with The New York Times


Maybe Frankenstein Really IS the Monster, Chicago Humanities Festival


A Teacher's Guide to Frankenstein from Penguin Books

 

 

Cloning

 

Human Genome Project logo

 

Human Genome Project logo

Can Mary Shelley's Frankenstein Be Read as an Early Research Ethics Text? Medical Humanities, 2004

 


The Hubris of Dr. Frankenstein and Reproductive Cloning, Albany Medical College

Cloning Fact Sheet, from National Human Genome Research Institute

Will Cloning Ever Save Endangered Animals? Scientific American (March 11, 2013)

 

 

 

The Search for the Northwest Passage

 

Frankenstein opens with a ship trapped in the Arctic ice, lost on its search for the Northwest Passage

 

A Northwest Passage Journey Finds Little Ice and Big Changes (2019)

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