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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: Mommy Issues 14421 Views


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Description:

Frankenstein reads kind of like a Freudian thesis. “My Sister Complex and Narcissism.” Siggy would have a field day.


Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:09

Frankenstein a la Shmoop

00:11

Mommy Issues

00:12

What's with all the mommy issues in Frankenstein?

00:16

And just kind of to recap a few things that are going on -

00:18

We have Walton, who is writing the entire story to his sister.

00:23

It's a little intimate, but okay.

00:26

- Intimate meaning sexual, incest-y, kind of? - Overtones. Yeah, yeah.

00:30

That's what I -- You know, subtext, Dave.

00:32

[ laughs ]

00:33

We're not subtle at Shmoop. It's baseball bat over the head.

00:36

And then we have Victor Frankenstein,

00:39

who is essentially supposed to marry his adopted sister.

00:44

Again, incestuous.

00:47

And then, you know, Henry is actually one of the

00:52

few characters in the story who's not related to Frankenstein.

00:55

So there's tons of family issues, mommy issues.

00:57

And we can really attribute this to anything.

01:00

People who like to read into the life of the author

01:02

as why certain happen in books.

01:05

We have Mary Shelley,

01:07

whose mother was the super famous feminist.

01:09

Her dad ran off with her mom

01:14

and, this was, like, totally unacceptable.

01:16

As I mentioned, she had given birth twice

01:19

by the time she wrote this book.

01:21

So a lot of people think of the monster

01:23

as a metaphor for childbirth.

01:25

Some people say Victor Frankenstein is

01:27

supposed to be Percy or her dad.

01:30

So there's -- A lot of people like to read

01:32

the biographical information onto it.

01:34

But the question is, you know,

01:36

still, "Why are the men in the book so obsessed with

01:40

their sisters and with their female relatives?"

01:43

And, on the one hand, we can just be like,

01:45

"Okay, they're just weirdos."

01:46

But most scholars tend to read

01:50

a Freudian reading of it.

01:52

Which basically means that the reason they're writing to their sisters

01:55

is because they're narcissists.

01:57

A family member is the closest you can come to yourself, right?

02:00

And so we have Walton writing to his sister.

02:02

Frankenstein is supposed to marry his sister.

02:05

And there are so many

02:07

interrelated family members in the entire story,

02:10

that it's this idea that Walton and especially Victor Frankenstein

02:14

just are so self-obsessed

02:16

and have such egos on them -

02:18

and this is very classic in Romantic heroes -

02:20

that the closest they can get to talking into a mirror

02:25

is writing to their family members.

02:29

Why are the men in Frankenstein so obsessed with their female relatives?

02:33

Hmm? Hmm?

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