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Wait. The monster’s name isn’t Frankenstein? Mind. Blown. Watch the video to find out more about Dr. Frankenstein’s nameless monster.
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Frankenstein: Does the Monster Have a Name? 22487 Views
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Description:
Wait. The monster’s name isn’t Frankenstein? Mind. Blown. Watch the video to find out more about Dr. Frankenstein’s nameless monster.
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:04
When this dead hand moves,
- 00:07
the monster created by a man they called mad
- 00:10
is turned loose to strike terror into the hearts of men.
- 00:16
Frankenstein a la Shmoop
Full Transcript
- 00:17
Does the Monster Have a Name?
- 00:23
The monster does not have a name in the book.
- 00:26
Let's start with the question of
- 00:28
why we think the monster is named "Frankenstein."
- 00:31
Part of it is because of Hollywood.
- 00:33
We see the movie. The movie is called Frankenstein.
- 00:37
And the image that sticks in our head
- 00:39
is Boris Karloff
- 00:40
with the things coming out of his ears and whatever,
- 00:43
so we think "Frankenstein" and we think "that guy."
- 00:45
And, until someone tells us otherwise
- 00:47
or we read the book, that's just what we think.
- 00:49
But, once you actually do read the book, you think,
- 00:53
"Huh, it's possible that Mary Shelley actually
- 00:55
wanted us to equate the two and confuse the two."
- 01:01
Couple reasons for this.
- 01:02
One is that kind of transition from Enlightenment thinking
- 01:05
to Romanticism, right?
- 01:06
Where the Enlightenment was all about reason and all that.
- 01:09
And then, you know, Mary Shelley writes this book
- 01:11
and is like, "Oh, hey, guess what?
- 01:12
Humans aren't all that different from beasts.
- 01:14
You know, let's push reason aside and remember that
- 01:18
we're kind of all just this --
- 01:19
It's all about the emotion and the imagination."
- 01:21
At the same time, the language
- 01:23
that Shelley uses
- 01:25
makes us kind of conflate or confuse these two, as well.
- 01:30
She refers to Frankenstein's monster as "monster" and as "creature."
- 01:36
The etymology of the word "monster"
- 01:38
comes from the idea of a warning or an omen.
- 01:41
And "creature" is, you know, something that has been created.
- 01:44
Shelley refers to the monster as "monster" and "creature."
- 01:47
She also refers to humans as "creature."
- 01:51
So she will be talking about "creature" meaning "humans,"
- 01:54
and then will be talking about "creature" meaning "Frankenstein's monster."
- 01:57
So we kind of get this sense of conflating
- 01:59
human and the monster, and the whole,
- 02:01
"They're actually not all that different after all."
- 02:03
And so some people would say that
- 02:05
if you really read closely and say,
- 02:07
"Okay, here's all the times" -- This is called close reading.
- 02:10
"Here are all the times the word 'monster' is used
- 02:13
to describe the monster.
- 02:14
Here are all the times 'creature' is used to describe the monster."
- 02:16
You'll see that she tends to use "monster"
- 02:19
when she's trying to show how different Frankenstein's monster
- 02:22
is from Victor.
- 02:23
And then she'll use "creature"
- 02:25
when she's trying to use how similar he is.
- 02:27
Got it. So the fact that the creature doesn't have a name -
- 02:33
You know, we name our dogs
- 02:34
and make them human in many ways -
- 02:38
is a powerful omission.
- 02:40
And I think about the novel Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man.
- 02:44
Invisible Man has no name.
- 02:45
- Yeah. - And that's a huge part of the book
- 02:48
and it screams things.
- 02:50
Well, England a couple hundred years ago,
- 02:52
I mean they were closer with their dogs
- 02:53
than they were with their children.
- 02:54
And they still are in England,
- 02:55
because they're lunatic dog country.
- 02:57
So you gotta think that
- 02:59
omitting a name was an active artistic choice
- 03:04
- Absolutely. - That screamed a number of things, I guess.
- 03:07
Yes. If you ever are reading a story
- 03:09
and, you know, the narrator doesn't have a name
- 03:13
or the main character doesn't have a name --
- 03:14
And this happens a lot.
- 03:15
You don't really notice it as much
- 03:18
because, you know, authors do it because it works
- 03:22
and there's a reason.
- 03:23
But if a character doesn't have a name,
- 03:26
or if the narrator doesn't have a name,
- 03:27
there's a specific reason for it.
- 03:29
And in Invisible Man, it's kind of thrown in our faces;
- 03:31
the title of the book is Invisible Man.
- 03:33
But, in a case like this,
- 03:35
we're supposed to wonder, you know,
- 03:36
"Are we supposed to see Frankenstein's monster as
- 03:38
not only inhuman but, like, not even a beast, not even a dog?"
- 03:41
- Right? - Right, right.
- 03:42
He's even lower than that.
- 03:44
And then, you know, is that his own fault?
- 03:46
Are we supposed to feel bad about that?
- 03:48
Or is he just -- Can we just toss him aside?
- 03:52
Why doesn't the monster have a name?
- 03:55
Why is it important to understand the difference between "creature" and "monster"?
- 04:00
Why do we think the monster's name is "Frankenstein"?
- 04:06
Why do we hate me?
- 04:07
What have I done to you that you should ever hate me so?
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