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Frankenstein: Enlightenment Vs. Romanticism 14365 Views
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Description:
Imagine Frankenstein characters as zombie/werewolf hybrids: one side wants brains, the other hearts. How to choose? Also, what to name them? Zomwolves? Werebies? Discuss amongst yourselves, Shmoopers.
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:04
Oh, dear. Nothing left. What shall we throw in now?
- 00:11
Frankenstein a la Shmoop
- 00:13
Enlightenment versus Romanticism
- 00:16
The Smackdown
Full Transcript
- 00:20
These are big concepts.
- 00:21
You can take an entire year-long course on one of these words,
- 00:25
- but we'll try and boil it down. - But don't.
- 00:26
Yeah. Please don't.
- 00:27
The Enlightenment was a period between
- 00:31
1660 and the beginning of the 19th century. [flags popping up on golden globe]
- 00:35
So it was for all of the 1700s, a little bit before, a little bit after.
- 00:39
And it's also known as the Age of Reason.
- 00:42
During the Enlightenment, thinkers like -
- 00:44
let's see how many names I can pull out -
- 00:46
Hobbes, Locke, et cetera, [portraits of Hobbes, Locke etc]
- 00:49
were basically saying that reason was the driving force in humanity,
- 00:52
always to look to reason.
- 00:54
There was a lot of metaphors with light. [hand holding sunset]
- 00:56
- That's why it's called "the Enlightenment." - Hegel, Dialectics. Yeah.
- 00:59
Thank you, yes. Dialectics. Yeah, look it up.
- 01:01
So the Enlightenment was the Age of Reason,
- 01:03
this period when everyone said,
- 01:04
"Okay, we need to focus on reason."
- 01:06
And more suppressing the emotional side of things
- 01:08
and looking toward like,
- 01:09
"Okay, use your brain and be reasonable. Rational." [old painting of people talking over papers]
- 01:11
Then along came Romanticism,
- 01:14
which was basically a reaction to the Enlightenment.
- 01:17
The Romantics were like,
- 01:18
"Why the focus on reason?
- 01:20
We wanna focus on imagination and emotion." [romantic paintings]
- 01:23
And so the Romantics --
- 01:24
This is Romantic with a capital "R,"
- 01:27
not with a lowercase "r."
- 01:29
And it's this idea that
- 01:31
emotion and imagination is what we should be focusing on.
- 01:35
And they also, going along with this,
- 01:37
the Romantics loved Nature.
- 01:39
Again, capital "N" Nature.
- 01:41
Yes, they loved nature like sticks and stones,
- 01:43
but the idea was that when you went out into Nature,
- 01:45
you became kind of fully immersed [woman swinging off tree]
- 01:47
and you could kind of feel these emotions
- 01:50
and these sensations that the Enlightenment thinkers
- 01:53
had just completely forgotten about [man looking through microscope]
- 01:54
because they were focusing too much on the rational
- 01:56
and the reason.
- 01:56
And, from a timeline perspective,
- 01:58
were these linear? Or what preceded Romanticism?
- 02:01
What was that a movement away from?
- 02:02
So Romanticism was specifically a movement
- 02:04
- away from the Enlightenment. - Got it.
- 02:06
And so late 1600s, 1700s, was Enlightenment,
- 02:09
and then kind of as the Enlightment
- 02:11
came to an end, we had
- 02:12
Romanticism kind of build out of that.
- 02:15
And it was a direct reaction to it,
- 02:17
because it was like,
- 02:17
"You wanna use your brains. We wanna use our hearts."
- 02:20
That's a very simplified way of thinking about it.
- 02:22
In Frankenstein, you can see this tension playing out,
- 02:25
because this is a book about scientific advancement.
- 02:28
Which is, if nothing else, reason, right?
- 02:31
We have Victor Frankenstein [Frankenstein bringing monster to life]
- 02:33
using science to create life.
- 02:36
We have this figure focusing on reason and Enlightenment.
- 02:38
But then we also see
- 02:40
the kind of Romantic ideal
- 02:43
in both Victor Frankenstein and the monster.
- 02:46
Of these characters who are just
- 02:48
torn up inside and they're lonely [clips of Frankenstein film]
- 02:51
and they feel all these emotions
- 02:53
that get so overwhelming.
- 02:55
The monster goes into nature and hides.
- 02:57
And they're both really inspired by the nature around them
- 03:01
and kind of feel this sensation of the sublime Nature around them.
- 03:05
So we kind of have both of these ideals.
- 03:07
And - spoiler alert - but we know how, you know,
- 03:10
things don't work out very well for anyone in the book.
- 03:12
And so we kind of think,
- 03:14
"Well, then Shelley must have been saying,
- 03:16
'Enlightenment bad, Romanticism good.'"
- 03:19
But not quite, because these characters are Romantic ideals
- 03:23
and they still don't succeed.
- 03:25
So there is definitely still a tension going on
- 03:29
between the two within Frankenstein.
- 03:33
What was the Enlightenment?
- 03:35
What is Romanticism?
- 03:36
How are both movements represented in Frankenstein?
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