ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Frankenstein: The Narrative Structure of Frankenstein 13039 Views
Share It!
Description:
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?
Up Next
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Related Videos
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.
Do not go gentle into that good night. In fact, if it's past your curfew, don't go at all into that good night. You just stay in your good bed and...