The Connell Guide To Mary Shelley's Frankenstein by Josie Billington

The Connell Guide To Mary Shelley's Frankenstein by Josie Billington

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The Connell Guide To Mary Shelley's Frankenstein by Josie Billington

There never was a wilder story imagined, wrote one reviewer on the first publication of Frankenstein in 1818: we do not well see why it should have been written. The admiring Sir Walter Scott felt that Frankenstein's unexpected and fearful events. shook a little even our firm nerves. The prophetic power of novel's imagery in reflecting the dehumanising effects of science, technology, empire, business and the mass media has never abated. Writing in 2002, Jay Clayton said: As a cautionary tale, Frankenstein has had an illustrious career; virtually every catastrophe of the last two centuries - revolution, rampant industrialism, epidemics, famines, World War 1, Nazism, nuclear holocaust, clone, replicants and robots - has been symbolized by Shelley's monster. Perhaps more than any other novel, Frankenstein has been interpreted as a warning impeding events. For some readers these warnings have produced a monstrous creation in place of Mary Shelley's own. Frankenstein is a product of criticism, not a work of literature, argues Fred Botting. Yet if the metaphorical interpretations of the novel appear to exceed the adolescent fantasy which gave rise to them, this is in itself a tribute to the original work, concludes Levine: The book is larger and richer than any of its progeny and too complex to serve as mere background. The novel has qualities that allow it to exfoliate as creatively and endlessly as any important myth. In this book, Josie Billington looks at the story and its legacy, and sifts the vast repertoire of critical opinion to give us the most interesting verdicts on the novel.
Josie Billington is Reader in English Literature and Deputy Director of the Centre for Research into Reading, Literature and Society at the University of Liverpool, UK. She has published widely on Victorian fiction and poetry and on interdisciplinary studies of the value of literary reading for health, including Is Literature Healthy? (2016).
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781907776571
ISBN 10 1907776575
Title The Connell Guide To Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
Author Josie Billington
Series The Connell Guide To
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher CONNELL PUBLISHING LTD
Year published 2016-12-13
Number of pages 128
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.