Friday, July 19, 2019
The Evolution of Frankenstein :: Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
      The Evolution of Frankenstein            Not so long ago, relative to the world at large, in picturesque Geneva not so  far from Lake     Leman, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley took part in a not so commonplace  "contest". The contest     was to write a ghost story. The outcome was Frankenstein; what is considered  today to be a     classic, one of the first science fiction tales, and a story immortalized  many times over in film.      And what at its inception was considered little more than the disturbed and  ill conceived writings     of a woman by some, and a noble if misplaced effort by others. Critical  readings of the novel have     grown over time to encompass more aspects of the critical range and to allow  for a broader     reading and understanding of the work which accounts for more than merely  face value formal,     rhetorical, mimetic or expressive theories alone.           In March of 1818, the same year Frankenstein was published, The Belle  Assemblee     magazine reviewed Frankenstein. In its opening paragraph states "..that the  presumptive works of     man must be frightful, vile, and horrible; ending only in discomfort and  misery to himself. But will     all our readers understand this?". Clearly this reviewer is, in some part,  taking into account     rhetorical theories. The analysis given is in the interests of the reader, so  that they might better be     able to appreciate the work. As well, credit is given to formal aspects of  the work, the     "excellence of its style and language" as well as "its originality,  excellence of language, and     peculiar interest".           Though this review was brief, and did little more than summarize the book for  interested     readers of the time, it did what many others did not, in that it focused on  Frankenstein as an     original work that offered something new to readers of the time. Further  reviews, from sources     such as Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine allowed the author, whose identity was  not known for     certain at the time, some small leeway in their criticisms. Though they too  agreed that the formal     style of Frankenstein was unique and praiseworthy, strictly mimetic theories  are taken into     account in matters they consider inconsistent within the novel, particularly  as they pertain to the     nature of the monster. It is looked upon as non-reflective of the way of the  real world, that a     					  The Evolution of Frankenstein  ::  Frankenstein, Mary Shelley        The Evolution of Frankenstein            Not so long ago, relative to the world at large, in picturesque Geneva not so  far from Lake     Leman, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley took part in a not so commonplace  "contest". The contest     was to write a ghost story. The outcome was Frankenstein; what is considered  today to be a     classic, one of the first science fiction tales, and a story immortalized  many times over in film.      And what at its inception was considered little more than the disturbed and  ill conceived writings     of a woman by some, and a noble if misplaced effort by others. Critical  readings of the novel have     grown over time to encompass more aspects of the critical range and to allow  for a broader     reading and understanding of the work which accounts for more than merely  face value formal,     rhetorical, mimetic or expressive theories alone.           In March of 1818, the same year Frankenstein was published, The Belle  Assemblee     magazine reviewed Frankenstein. In its opening paragraph states "..that the  presumptive works of     man must be frightful, vile, and horrible; ending only in discomfort and  misery to himself. But will     all our readers understand this?". Clearly this reviewer is, in some part,  taking into account     rhetorical theories. The analysis given is in the interests of the reader, so  that they might better be     able to appreciate the work. As well, credit is given to formal aspects of  the work, the     "excellence of its style and language" as well as "its originality,  excellence of language, and     peculiar interest".           Though this review was brief, and did little more than summarize the book for  interested     readers of the time, it did what many others did not, in that it focused on  Frankenstein as an     original work that offered something new to readers of the time. Further  reviews, from sources     such as Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine allowed the author, whose identity was  not known for     certain at the time, some small leeway in their criticisms. Though they too  agreed that the formal     style of Frankenstein was unique and praiseworthy, strictly mimetic theories  are taken into     account in matters they consider inconsistent within the novel, particularly  as they pertain to the     nature of the monster. It is looked upon as non-reflective of the way of the  real world, that a     					    
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