Archive for the “Romantic Gothic” Category

Here are copies of, or links to, all the excellent presentations that you gave on themes in Frankenstein and links to other Gothic texts.  Use these to help with your revision. The top 4 are links to PowerPoint files and the bottom 4 are links to blog posts.

frankenstein – the monster and the human - Vicki

the-critique-of-society - Daniel

alienation - Emma

frankenstein-domesticity - Shomari

Discovery and ambition – Sam

The fear of sexuality – Sophie

Birth and creation – Liseli

The double – Helen

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It is important to be able to contrast modern ‘readings’ of Frankenstein with the persepctives of contemporary readers and critics.  Follow the link here to look at 6 initial reviews of the novel.  Ideally, look at a few of them, but by the next lesson (Wednesday 4th June) please make sure to have read the review specified for you below, and post a comment doing the following:

  • summarising that particular reviewer’s views of the novel; 
  • evaluating whether this seems typical of commonly held perceptions of early Gothic novels;
  • contrasting modern critical reactions to the text.

Reviews allocated as follows.  If there are 2 of you looking at one review, please both write a separate comment.  All comments will be held for moderation and published only once all comments have been submitted:

The Belle Assemblee or Bell’s Court and Fashionable Magazine - Liseli

The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany - Helen, Shomari

Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine - Victoria

The British Critic – Sophie

The Literary Panorama and National Register - Emma

The Quarterly Review - Samantha, Daniel

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mariner.jpg I hope you enjoyed this classic poem, and the macabre illustrations!  This is clearly an influence for Shelley as she quotes it on a number of occasions in Frankenstein.  I think there are a number of thematic links that can be drawn between the texts, and this is what I’d like you to focus on here.

Add a comment on this post (not on your own blog), answering the following questions which ask you to compare this text to Frankenstein.   Due by the lesson on Friday 28th March.

  1. What links can you make between the settings in both texts?
  2. What links can you make between the Ancient Mariner and any one of the three main narrators in Frankenstein?
  3. What similarities would you say the texts have in terms of Gothic ‘features’?
  4. If you are posting after others have posted, have a go at responding to their points – what do you agree or disagree with?  Or if you are one of the first to post, ask questions of the people yet to post… Or do both! 

Extension: come back later and see what the others have put – go crazy and post a second message!

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