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Frankenstein: Who is the Monster? 39632 Views
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Description:
What do Satan and Frankenstein's monster have in common? They’re both heroes. ...Wait. What?
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:07
Your father was Frankenstein.
- 00:09
But your mother was the lightning!
- 00:12
Frankenstein a la Shmoop
- 00:14
Who is the Monster?
Full Transcript
- 00:15
Are we supposed to sympathize with the monster?
- 00:20
The Romantics were obsessed with a lot of things.
- 00:23
They were obsessed with
- 00:25
emotion, and nature, and the Sublime.
- 00:27
And another thing they were obsessed with was Satan.
- 00:29
[ ominous classical music ]
- 00:31
They all reached back to Paradise Lost,
- 00:33
which is this epic poem by John Milton
- 00:36
which basically just recounts the story
- 00:40
of Satan as a fallen angel.
- 00:42
And, you know, kind of retells the Bible in some fashion.
- 00:46
Shelley actually uses a line from Paradise Lost
- 00:52
as the epigraph to her book,
- 00:53
which we'll talk about a little bit later.
- 00:55
But Romantic thinkers thought of Satan as a kind of hero.
- 00:59
You know, this Romantic hero
- 01:01
or Byronic hero, also called a Satanic hero.
- 01:03
Satan in Paradise Lost
- 01:05
is a hero of some sort.
- 01:08
Satan is a figure who is rebelling against his overlord.
- 01:12
In this case, God.
- 01:14
We think of the same thing in Frankenstein.
- 01:15
Is Frankenstein's monster a Satanic hero
- 01:19
where he's just rebelling against his overlord?
- 01:22
And if so, then he's Satan, but we also feel bad for him.
- 01:27
- Right. - Because it's not his fault.
- 01:28
So we can kind of have a devilish figure who we also
- 01:32
sympathize with.
- 01:34
And that ambiguity is definitely something that
- 01:36
Shelley's trying to bring out.
- 01:37
Is there an allegory there for the plight of women?
- 01:39
Who were -- It wasn't their fault.
- 01:41
They were controlled by men;
- 01:42
they kind of had to rebel.
- 01:43
But in, sort of, guilt that you would feel
- 01:46
and a whole range of...
- 01:47
Yeah, absolutely.
- 01:48
I mean, again, reading onto Shelley's life,
- 01:52
you know, this proto-feminism
- 01:53
and being a woman among men
- 01:55
is a huge part of it,
- 01:56
so we can really read that onto almost every part
- 01:58
of Frankenstein if we want.
- 01:59
But this idea of
- 02:00
you're born into a society that is one way
- 02:04
and you need to change that.
- 02:06
Can we really fault Frankenstein's monster
- 02:09
for wanting to rebel? No.
- 02:11
Can we fault Satan for wanting to rebel?
- 02:13
Maybe not.
- 02:17
Does the monster deserve our sympathy?
- 02:20
How did the Romantics envision Satan?
- 02:23
Is the monster similar to Satan?
- 02:27
[ evil laugh ]
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