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No HBO? Well then, how does a horror short story writing contest sound? And the winner is...drum roll, please...Mary Shelley. You go, girl. And tha...
This story goes as you might expect—a sprinkling of science, endless amounts of death and despair, and a whole lot of ugly monster. Oh joyous day!
Wait. The monster’s name isn’t Frankenstein? Mind. Blown. Watch the video to find out more about Dr. Frankenstein’s nameless monster.
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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