Women’s History Month – Mary Shelley

It’s Women’s History month. This week, let’s explore Mary Shelley and her influence on literature.

When we think of authors who write stories about science gone wrong, we usually think of men like Michael Crichton. From Jurassic Park to Prey, his body of work is filled with warning of what can happen when science gets in the wrong hands. It may surprise you that while the genre of bad science is dominated by men, we have Mary Shelley to thank for starting it all.

Mary Shelley was born Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin in Somers Town, London, in 1797. She was the second child of the feminist philosopher, educator, and writer Mary Wollstonecraft, and the first child of the philosopher, novelist, and journalist William Godwin. Though Mary Godwin received little formal education, her father tutored her in a broad range of subjects. He often took the children on educational outings, and they had access to his library Godwin admitted he was not educating the children according to Mary Wollstonecraft’s philosophy as outlined in works such as A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), but Mary Godwin nonetheless received an unusual and advanced education for a girl of the time. She had a governess, a daily tutor, and read many of her father’s children’s books on Roman and Greek history in manuscript. Her father described her at fifteen as “singularly bold, somewhat imperious, and active of mind. Her desire of knowledge is great, and her perseverance in everything she undertakes almost invincible.

Mary and her father probably attended medical lectures that were all the rage in early 18th century Europe. Electric shock treatments on dead animals was a huge draw, as scientists thought they could harness its power to bring the dead back to life. Many feared this idea of “playing God”. In fact the Romantics, which Mary would come to belong to, had great distain for the industrial age.

Mary’s liberal upbringing had a profound effect on her psych. She was smart and inquisitive but pushed the boundaries of what was considered proper behavior for 18th century women. She fell in love with a very married Percy Shelley and ran off with him when she was only 17 and he was 22. They married only after Percy’s first wife committed suicide. Their life together was anything but idyllic .Two of Mary and Percy’s children would die in infancy, he cheated on her and they were often destitute and always staying with friends to make ends meet.

In the summer of 1816 the Shelleys visited the poet Lord Byron at his villa at Lake Geneva in Switzerland. Bad weather frequently forced them indoors, where they and Byron’s other guests sometimes read ghost stories and spoke about new scientific developments. One evening, Byron challenged his guests to write a ghost story. Mary’s story became the novel Frankenstein. Published in 1818 under the title, Frankenstein: A Modern Prometheus, it was the first true science fiction novel.  As a tale of science gone wrong, the novel was not well received by literary critics.  The fact that the author was the daughter of a prominent and controversial author as well as a  “fallen woman” living in a scandalous relationship raised critical hackles as well.  Despite the criticism, Mary Shelley’s novel was an immediate success with numerous reprintings, foreign translations, and theatrical productions.

Mary never did come right out and talk about her reasons or influence for Frankenstein. She once wrote about John Milton’s influence; the fall of man was a topic she explored in Frankenstein and The Last Man. Surely the idea of bringing a man back to life must of come from at least talking and reading about the use of electricity. This was the topic of conversation for high society and the Romantics.

Whatever the influence, we have Mary Shelley to thank for the invention of the “mad scientist”, and for being the first to explore the horrors of science gone bad.

Women of Literature: Jane Austen, my white whale

March is Women’s History Month. What better way to celebrate than to write about women of literature! This month I will devote my blog posts to women in literature who have had an impact on my life. I will start with Jane Austen. Here is a brief look at the beloved author’s life, taken from PBS:

Born in 1775 to George and Cassandra Austen in the English village of Steventon, Jane Austen grew up in a highly literate family. Austen’s father was an Oxford-educated clergyman and her mother was a humorous, aristocratic woman. Educated only briefly outside of her home, Austen read freely in her father’s library of 500 books, which left her better educated than most young girls of the time. While her family never anticipated she would be a published writer (not considered an appropriate profession for a young lady of her background), within the walls of their household she was encouraged to write. In this lively intellectual household the 15-year-old Austen began writing her own novels; and by age 23 she had completed the original versions of Northanger Abbey, Sense and Sensibility, and Pride and Prejudice. Her own delight in reading and her ironic mocking of its impact on young girls comes alive in Northanger Abbey. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/austen/austen.html.

You may or may not know this but, every time you watch a “chick flick” in which boy meets girl, girl hates boy, girl falls for boy, or boy meets girl, then loses girl only to win her back, you are watching a movie based on an Austen plot devise. Many of us have grown up with the idea that a break-up is never the end of a relationship. Thanks to Austen, we hang on longer than we should.

I am going to make a big confession right here and now; I read my first Jane Austen novel last weekend. I picked up Pride & Prejudice last Saturday an  read it in one sitting. Yet, my favorite movie is based on her book Sense and Sensibility.  Oh how I love watching Emma Thompson and Hugh Grant as they fall in love! You’d think after watching the movie I’d eagerly pick up Austen and read everything she has ever written, after all, my friends tell me there is more the story of S&S. Confession number 2: I cannot get passed the first page of S&S, the language has me stumped.

For years I thought I was not smart enough to read Austen. I ‘d hold those in awe who would talk about her books as if they were talking about the Twilight series; Mr. Darcy is to them what Edward  is to the young crowd. Austen’s writing was my white whale, something I obsessed on, yet could not grasp. Now, having finally read P&P I understand Austen’s appeal to young girls and why her books are as popular as ever. Yet, even as her ideas about relationships influence my behavior, I have to ask: What’s up with all the Mr. Darcy love? Why is he high on “men I want to date” lists?

If you’ve read P&P and love Mr. Darcy, talk to me. Tell me what is so appealing about him? And, if Miss Austen has influenced your life, tell me all about it!

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