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The Endurance of Frankenstein - Essays on Mary Shelley's Novel (Paperback, New Ed)
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The Endurance of Frankenstein - Essays on Mary Shelley's Novel (Paperback, New Ed)
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MARY SHELLEY's Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus grew out of
a parlor game and a nightmare vision. The story of the book's
origin is a famous one, first told in the introduction Mary Shelley
wrote for the 1831 edition of the novel. The two Shelleys, Byron,
Mary's stepsister Claire Clairmont, and John William Polidori
(Byron's physician) spent a "wet, ungenial summer in the Swiss
Alps." Byron suggested that "each write a ghost story." If one is
to trust Mary Shelley's account (and James Rieger has shown the
untrustworthiness of its chronology and particulars), only she and
"poor Polidori" took the contest seriously. The two "illustrious
poets," according to her, "annoyed by the platitude of prose,
speedily relinquished their uncongenial task." Polidori, too, is
made to seem careless, unable to handle his story of a
"skull-headed lady." Though Mary Shelley is just as deprecating
when she speaks of her own "tiresome unlucky ghost story," she also
suggests that its sources went deeper. Her truant muse became
active as soon as she fastened on the "idea" of "making only a
transcript of the grim terrors of my waking dream": "'I have found
it! What terrified me will terrify others."' The twelve essays in
this collection attest to the endurance of Mary Shelley's "waking
dream." Appropriately, though less romantically, this book also
grew out of a playful conversation at a party. When several of the
contributors to this book discovered that they were all closet
aficionados of Mary Shelley's novel, they decided that a book might
be written in which each contributor-contestant might try to
account for the persistent hold that Frankenstein continues to
exercise on the popular imagination. Within a few months, two
films--Warhol's Frankenstein and Mel Brooks's Young
Frankenstein--and the Hall-Landau and Isherwood-Bachardy television
versions of the novel appeared to remind us of our blunted purpose.
These manifestations were an auspicious sign and resulted in the
book Endurance of Frankenstein.
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