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Description
This programme presents a deliberately wide range of views about the importance and possible meanings of the creature in Mary Shelley's novel. The programme begins by identifying the mythic status ...that the word 'Frankenstein' seems to have acquired in contemporary western culture, then goes on to cover the following areas: the connection between the science and the story of Frankenstein; the idea of birth and the relationship between parents and children; issues of responsibility; the degree to which 'a look', a visible sign of otherness, creates social exclusion (or not); a specifically gendered reading of the text; readings of Frankenstein historically (as a debate on Rousseau's ideas of the 'Noble Savage', a metaphor for the French Revolution, Eve's narrative etc); the decision to create, then destroy the 'Creature'. The programme ends by sampling the participants' evident delight and particular interest in the ways the novel and its characters and ideas have been transformed since it was originally written.
Metadata describing this Open University video programme
Module code and title: A210, Approaching literature
Item code: A210; 01
First transmission date: 21-02-1996
Published: 1996
Rights Statement:
Restrictions on use:
Duration: 00:49:02
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Producer: Tony Coe
Contributors: Forrest Ackerman; Brad Linaweaver; Stephen Regan
Publisher: BBC Open University
Keyword(s): Frankenstein; Gothic & Romanticism; Science fiction; Simulations
Subject terms: Literature and technology; Monsters in literature; Myth in literature
Master spool number: DOU8235
Production number: FOUA466A
Videofinder number: 5145
Available to public: no