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Playlist Frankenstein: Shmoopversations 14 videos

0
Frankenstein: Getting to Know Mary Shelley
2598 Views

We’ll preface this video about Frankenstein’s preface by saying that Mary Shelley is an awesome woman, and she wants everybody to be aware. Che...

1
Frankenstein: The Narrative Structure of Frankenstein
13039 Views

Dearest Shmooper, Watch the video to find out more about the epistolary, layered, narrative of Frankenstein. Or watch a cute kitten video on Yout...

2
Frankenstein: Enlightenment Vs. Romanticism
14365 Views

Imagine Frankenstein characters as zombie/werewolf hybrids: one side wants brains, the other hearts. How to choose? Also, what to name them? Zomwol...

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Frankenstein: Getting to Know Victor 17657 Views


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Description:

Is Victor Frankenstein a: Romantic Hero? b: Byronic Hero? c: Satanic Hero? d: Guitar Hero? All of the above (but maybe not D…) We don’t know what any of these terms mean, so let’s just watch the video


Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:03

It's alive!

00:05

[ sobbing ]

00:06

In the name of God,

00:08

now I know what it feels like to be God!

00:14

Frankenstein a la Shmoop

00:15

Getting to Know Victor

00:17

Is Victor Frankenstein a Romantic hero?

00:22

Yes. Short answer, yes.

00:24

He is kind of the perfect Romantic hero.

00:27

He is brooding.

00:29

He's torn - "Did I do the right thing?

00:32

Should I go back and help the monster?

00:34

I don't know what to do."

00:35

Totally torn. He's torn up about his family and everything.

00:38

He also kind of has a

00:40

healthy-ish sense of self-importance about him,

00:43

which is another part of the Romantic hero.

00:45

These guys have egos on them.

00:47

This guy thought he could create life.

00:49

He, as you said before, played God.

00:51

He also embodies the Romantic hero

00:54

in that he is inspired by nature.

00:57

And he kind of has these --

00:58

He describes them as these visions of nature

01:00

where he goes out into it

01:01

and he realizes the sublime.

01:04

The sublime is -- It actually kind of has never really been defined.

01:08

No one's ever agreed on what it means,

01:10

but generally, it's that when you go out into nature

01:13

and you get this awe-inspired feeling

01:16

that you can't get anywhere else.

01:18

That's the sublime.

01:19

And that's what happens when Victor is out in nature

01:22

and looking out at the bigger world.

01:25

He gets this sense of it's greater than him.

01:28

What is a Byronic hero?

01:31

Romantic hero is kind of synonymous with Byronic hero.

01:34

You remember that name.

01:36

"Byron" from Lord Byron, who was actually the one

01:38

who was like, "Hey, we should write ghost stores."

01:41

So, thank you, Lord Byron, for Frankenstein.

01:44

And we call it a Byronic hero

01:46

because it's -- He kind of created this idea

01:50

of the ideal Romantic hero.

01:52

Different from The Six Million Dollar Man, by the way,

01:55

- for those of you who remember that. - Bionic.

01:56

Keep going.

01:57

[ laughs ]

01:58

So, as I mentioned all these things before,

02:01

but who just basically sees the world as bigger than himself,

02:05

but also is kind of rebellious,

02:08

like I mentioned, arrogant, et cetera.

02:10

You start to kind of add all of these pieces together,

02:13

and you end up with Satan.

02:15

So Romantic hero, Byronic hero, Satanic hero -

02:20

all kind of synonymous.

02:22

We'll talk a little bit more about that in later lessons

02:25

of how, you know, we can see the kind of

02:28

God/Adam/Satan situation playing out in Frankenstein.

02:32

That actually makes a lot of sense because Dante

02:34

would have been a big influence in these writers

02:36

who are early 1800s.

02:39

There's Shakespeare, Dante, Canterbury Tales.

02:42

There wasn't a lexicography of literature

02:44

the way there is today where you, you know,

02:45

have tons of great writers to read.

02:47

Right, exactly. And it's actually, in Frankenstein,

02:50

the particular influence is John Milton with Paradise Lost.

02:52

And we'll talk about that a little bit more.

02:57

How would you classify Victor Frankenstein?

03:01

What is a Romantic hero?

03:03

What is a Byronic hero?

03:07

Not ironic hero, Byronic.

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