Frankenstein: The 1818 Edition with Related Texts

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Frankenstein: The 1818 Edition with Related Texts
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Mary Shelley
Edited by David Wootton
SeriesHackett Classics
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:384
Dimensions(mm): Height 229,Width 153
Category/GenreClassic fiction (pre c 1945)
Horror and ghost stories
ISBN/Barcode 9781624669125
ClassificationsDewey:823/.7
Audience
General
Illustrations 4

Publishing Details

Publisher Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
Imprint Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
Publication Date 23 September 2020
Publication Country United States

Description

'In this new edition of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, David Wootton's Introduction gives the reader both a clear and gripping account of the biographical circumstances that led to the novel's writing and the most striking and original interpretations of its central themes and of the intellectual and cultural influences on them. Offering a new account of the complex history of its composition, and drawing upon his deep knowledge of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century scientific debates, Wootton reveals the ways in which the origins of Shelley's novel are inextricably linked to conceptions of the origins of life itself. We have here a transformative reading of one of the world's best-known stories.' - Laura Marcus, Goldsmiths' Professor of English Literature and Fellow of New College, University of Oxford 'A superb edition of Shelley's troubling masterpiece, with lucid explanatory notes and rich contextual material on the biographical, cultural, and scientific background to the text. Wootton's Introduction is a tour de force of revisionist scholarship, and his bold new arguments about Frankenstein's reworking of Promethean myth, its engagement with Romantic-era science, and the sources and significance of its arctic frame-tale will set the agenda for future debate.' - Thomas Keymer, Chancellor Henry N. R. Jackman University Professor of English, University of Toronto

Author Biography

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is a novel written in epistolary form, documenting a fictional correspondence between Captain Robert Walton and his siste, Margaret Walton Saville. Walton is failed writer and captain who sets out to explore the North Ple and expand his scientific kowledge in hopes of achieving fame. Durng the voyage, the cre spots a dog saled driven by a gigantic fiture. David Wootton is Anniversary Professor of History, University of York.

Reviews

"A superb edition of Shelley's troubling masterpiece, with lucid explanatory notes and rich contextual material on the biographical, cultural, and scientific background to the text. Wootton's Introduction is a tour de force of revisionist scholarship, and his bold new arguments about Frankenstein 's reworking of Promethean myth, its engagement with Romantic-era science, and the sources and significance of its arctic frame-tale will set the agenda for future debate." -- Thomas Keymer, Chancellor Henry N. R. Jackman University Professor of English, University of Toronto "Wootton's new edition presents Shelley's Frankenstein in a vivid new light. Informed by his immense erudition in the histories of both science and political thought, his brilliantly lucid Introduction pieces together the book's complex and sometimes conflicting elements, and proposes several new interpretations. Generously annotated throughout, and with a judicious selection of related writings and contemporary reviews, this will be the go-to text for all students of the novel." -- Seamus Perry, Professor of English Literature and Fellow of Balliol College, University of Oxford "David Wootton, the editor of a splendid new edition of Frankenstein that includes a rich variety of relevant texts, prefers to focus on the contribution made to the novel by Mary's reading of contemporary articles on travel (the book's first narrator, Robert Walton, is bound for the North Pole, which he describes as 'the favourite dream of my early years'). Wootton's magisterial introduction grants equal significance to the earnest discussions about generating life that took place in 1816 at Lord Byron's lakeside villa in Switzerland, where Frankenstein was conceived." Miranda Seymour, in The New York Review of Books