
Ear Read This Frankenstein (1818) by Mary Shelley
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Nov 4, 2021 Join theatre practitioner Emily Ingram, artistic director of Some Kind of Theatre and current playwright on Mary Shelley, as she explores the dark origins of Frankenstein. Discover the ghost-story challenge that sparked the classic, the tension between dreams and deliberate craft, and Shelley's familial influences, particularly concerning maternal absence. Emily also discusses the creature's sympathetic portrayal and various interpretations, from feminist readings to critiques of Enlightenment hubris, making for a rich, captivating analysis of this iconic tale.
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Geneva Ghost-Story Gathering
- Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein during the gloomy "year without summer" while staying near Villa Diodati with Byron and Percy Shelley.
- Byron's ghost-story challenge spurred the group activity that led Mary to conceive her novel.
Bleak Scenery Fuels the Imagination
- Shelley links bleak landscapes to creative imagination, using barren settings to inspire her novel's mood and scenes.
- She later framed the Genesis of Frankenstein as a vivid waking vision, though Emily doubts this literal origin story.
Don't Reduce Genius To 'A Dream'
- Question claims of purely dreamy inspiration and credit craft and knowledge for major works.
- Emily suggests readers recognise Shelley's deliberate literary and scientific competence rather than reduce her to a mystic muse.






