Frankenstein, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 206 - YouTube (1)
Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course Literature, and today we continue our discussion
of “Frankenstein”. Oh, Me From the Past didn't even come to
school today. Isn't that fantastic? Well we're going to learn something without him.
Last time we talked a little bit about the Romantics, “Frankenstein” is often cited
as the definitive Romantic novel, but ehh… let's get a little bit deeper into it.
Capital “R” Romantics don't have a lot to do with lower case ‘r' romantics, unless
your idea of romance involves like ecstatic descriptions of nature and a revolutionary
spirit that often ends in bloodshed. And if that's your idea of romance, don't
put it in your OK Cupid profile. However, pro tip, do say that you're 6'3”.
Knowing more about the capital “R” Romantics will help you be better at lower case “r” romance so stick with me here.
[Theme Music]
So Romanticism was a movement originating in the late 18th century and it's typically
understood as a reaction against both the Industrial Revolution's devaluing of the
individual human spirit and embracing of like the soulless assembly line. And also the Enlightenment's
claims of scientific certainty. Romanticism prizes intuition over rationalism,
and nature and wildness over classical harmony, and emotions—especially difficult emotions
like horror and awe and terror and passion—are preferred over intellect.
And there's an emphasis on the unconscious and irrational part of humans. There's a
lot of talk of dreams and stuff. So is “Frankenstein” a Romantic novel?
Well, if you take a course in Romantic lit in college then you will almost definitely
read it. So, yes. “Frankenstein” is interested in difficult,
uncomfortable emotions the wonder and awe and horror of encountering the radically other.
And it's certainly in many ways also a response to the Enlightenment's emphasis on scientific rationality.
I mean people at the time really thought that we would eventually be able to
reanimate the dead and other people were rightly troubled by that.
Then again, you can also read the book as a critique -- and a pretty stern one --
of the kind of thinking and acting that Romanticism encourages, right?
I mean Romanticism preaches a radical self-involvement that privileges the individual's pursuit
of knowledge and glory but for all of Victor and Walton's encountering nature and going
with their gut it's pretty disastrous. . Another popular reading is to interpret “Frankenstein”
autobiographically, a reading that was encouraged via 1970s feminist criticism of the novel.
Earlier readings along these lines situates “Frankenstein” as a tale of monstrous
birth and look to Mary Shelley's own experiences with birth, which were pretty terrible..
I mean Mary Shelley's mother died while giving birth to her and Mary and Percy's
own first child, a daughter, died when she was just a few weeks old.
And in her journal, Mary recounted an incredibly sad dream about this daughter: “Dream that
my little baby came to life again; that it had only been cold & that we rubbed it before
the fire & it lived.” So, of course, the idea of bringing the dead
back to life had occurred to her even before she listened in on Percy Shelley and Byron
discussing new developments in electricity. Mary Shelley even refers to the book itself
as a child. In her intro to the 1831 edition, she wrote, “I bid my hideous progeny go
forth and prosper. I have an affection for it, for it was the offspring of happy days.”
That's a very tempting reading, but it's also really literal and reductive.
First off, and I'm saying this partly defensively as a novelist, novelist don't write exclusively
from their own experience. More importantly, I'm not at all convinced
that making an author the central character of a novel is a particularly helpful way to
read it. So if you read “Frankenstein” as merely
as Mary Shelley working out her own personal issues you miss the great and terrible questions
at the center of the book. The questions that really can change you.
There's in fact a term for trying to do this kind of reading—“intentional fallacy”—in
which we believe we can know exactly what the author was thinking when they wrote a
book. But putting aside those biographical readings
there are still some pretty interesting feminist critiques of “Frankenstein.”
For instance, the novel clearly shows what harm comes to women (and families and relationships)
when men pursue single-minded goals. In fact, thanks to Victor's lack of work-life
balance, pretty much all the women in this novel die. I mean Victor's creation of the
monster leads to the hanging of the servant Justine, the murder of Victor's bride Elizabeth
on their wedding night. And occasionally in the novel Mary Shelley
refers to nature itself as female, suggesting that Victor is violating it, as when Victor
discusses how with “unrelaxed and breathless eagerness, I pursued nature to her hiding-places.”
I mean you can say I'm reading sex into that if you want but “unrelaxed and breathless
eagerness.”? And there are also plenty of suggestions that
Victor might not like women very much. The creature says that he will leave Victor and
all mankind alone forever if Victor just creates a mate for him and Victor begins work, but
then he gets freaked out over what it will mean to create a lady monster.
Now admittedly that's partly because it might mean monster progeny but just look at
the text, “She might become ten thousand times more malignant than her mate,” thinks
Victor, “and delight, for its own sake, in murder and wretchedness.”
He worries, “a race of devils would be propagated upon the earth who might make the very existence
of the species of man a condition precarious and full of terror.”
So Victor destroys the female creature while the monster watches. He recalls, how “trembling
with passion, [I] tore to pieces the thing on which I was engaged.”
I don't think I'm being too weird to point out the sexy stuff there: “trembling with
passion.” Anyway, Victor claims to love his cousin, Elizabeth, but he deserts her
for years at a time and even though the creature says—really, really, really clearly—“I
will be with you on your wedding-night,” he leaves her alone on his wedding night.
Now we can all wonder why Mary Shelley didn't create any strong female characters here and
instead a collection of suffering, passive, doomed ones, but we can certainly read the
novel as an exploration of what happens when men fear, distrust, or devalue women so much
that they attempt to reproduce without them. I mean in some ways Victor is trying to bypass
the feminine altogether. He's creating life without recourse to egg or womb. Now you could
counter this by saying that Mary Shelley's original Creator—God—did the same thing.
But that's precisely the point. Victor is not God.
And perhaps this is where “Frankenstein” is still most relevant, in its discussion
of “playing God,” of the single-minded pursuit of science without an accompanying
concern about you know, morality. Now, obviously, the experiments that Victor
undertakes are extreme, but Mary Shelley was basing them on some of the scientific debates
and discoveries of her day. And even if the book is largely science fiction, there's
a certain amount of scientific fact in it, and a lot of scientific questioning.
And part of why this book has survived is because the questions she was asking were
important in her day, but they're also pretty important now.
I mean there was a recent book on genetic modifications in animals called “Frankenstein's
Cat”, those who object to GMO foods often label them Frankenfoods, which only makes
them sound like Franken-berry cereal - which is delicious!
So Mary Shelley was influenced… oh… it must be time for The Open Letter.
Oh look, it's Frankenstein's monster. No, wait, it's the Hulk. It actually occurs
to me that they're quite similar. Both monsters created by failed scientific
experiments who only really become monstrous when they're rejected by society.
Anyway, an Open Letter to scientists: Dear Scientists, here's a little rule of thumb.
Anytime you're doing any kind of experiment, ask yourself the question, “Could this create
a monster?” Even if the chances are relatively low, I'm going to advise against that experiment,
because what I have seen from the movies and from books is that if it can become a monster it will!
But I will say scientists that I think you've been a bit unfairly maligned by poor readings of “Frankenstein.”
Frankenstein is not like the Hulk because his story isn't, at least not simply, about
about science run amok. It's an oversimplification scientists.
You are doing good work with you lab coats and your chemicals and I thank you. Don't turn
anyone into a monster. Best wishes, John Green. Right, but anyway, Mary Shelley was influenced
by several scientists, but chief among them Erasmus Darwin, grandfather to Charles, and
Luigi Galvani. Darwin published a long poem called “The
Temple of Nature,” because back then poetry was a totally reasonable way to share scientific
ideas. He had an idea that life—at least on the
microscopic level—could be restored to seemingly dead matter or created out of inert matter,
a phenomenon he called “spontaneous generation.”
And Galvani, became famous for conducting experiments with electricity, in which he
showed that electrical impulses could animate the muscles of dead creatures like the legs
of a deceased frog. Did you get it? “.. conducting experiments
in electricity”, anyone? Conducting electricity? No? OK.
Galvani's followers did even more macabre experiments, like in 1803 test in which several
scientists attached electrodes to the body of an executed murderer in the hope of restoring
it to life. Because they were like, “Oh, man. Who should
we bring back from the dead? I know, a murderer!” Anyway, they,of course, didn't succeed,
but they did succeed in making a few of the murder's muscles convulse.
These experiments clearly influence Victor's attempt to reanimate dead flesh and in fact
Victor's experiments weren't that much radical than ones that were actually happening
at the time. That said, the novel itself is clearly pretty
skeptical about these pursuits. I mean even before he animates the monster, it's clear
that his studies are exacting a tremendous toll on Victor's health, and his well being,
also that of his friends and family. Let's go to the Thought Bubble.
Victor describes how “My cheek had grown pale with study, and my person had become
emaciated with confinement,” which is a pretty good passage to show your parents when
they're pushing you to go pre-med. And things only went downhill once he began
to assemble the creature. Victor, “dabbled among the unhallowed damps of the grave, or
tortured the living animal…collected bones from charnel-houses; and disturbed, with profane
fingers, the tremendous secrets of the human frame,”
But Victor thinks that this digging around in slaughterhouses and graveyards will be
worth it; he says “I might in process of time…renew life where death had apparently
devoted the body to corruption.” And that's an amazing and laudable goal (unless you've
ever seen any zombie movie ever, in which case you would know that it's a TERRIBLE
idea). But in that same passage, Victor says that
the creatures he makes “would bless me as its creator and source…. No father could
claim the gratitude of his child so completely as I should deserve theirs.”
So it's clear that his desire is actually selfish and that he's pursuing this knowledge
not for universal good, or so that the dead may live again, but for his own gratification.
And then of course there's his reaction when his experiment does succeed. I mean,
even though he's assembled every facet of the creature and made him huge on purpose
so that all these fiddly bits like veins and eyelashes will be easier to work with, he