Frankenstein: Post I of III

An Aside

Front piece to the 1831 edition of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein depicting Frankenstein and the Creature.

Front piece to the 1831 edition of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein depicting Frankenstein and the Creature.

Over the course of the next couple weeks, I will be using this space (along with the spaces of two other blog posts) to analyze, study, and contextualize the purpose and application of Frankenstein Digital Humanities projects already in progress. This process will allow the pursuit on the conceptualization of the text, how different digital versions of the text impact how we read it, and how this serves as a tool to interpret the text.

By looking at how different archives, sites, and projects have formatted the text, or via plain text, we can begin to interpret how the text performs when read all together or separately, and how this performs within our own analysis of the text.


The Texts

Below are listed some of the different digital versions of the full 1818 text available for public consumption. They are categorized based on how they present the text, either collectively or separated either by paragraph, letter, or chapter:

Modernizing the Story: Contextualizing the Story of Prometheus

Who was Prometheus?

Prometheus and vulture via Fine Art America

Prometheus and vulture via Fine Art America

Firstly, I want to contextualize Prometheus as both a figure and a term. As a figure, Prometheus in Greek Mythology brought fire to mankind, the Olympians, amidst the battle of Titans and Olympians led by Zeus in an attempt to rule over all the heavens. Initially, Prometheus was fighting alongside the Titans as a primary ringleader, but the Titans to wont to listen to his advice and use trickery on the Olympians to win the war. Thus, Prometheus joined the side of the Olympians. However, upon gifting mankind fire, Zeus became enraged and condemned Prometheus to life of eternal hell: everyday he would have his liver eaten by (either a vulture or eagle, as the story allots both, although in context of the eagle connotes Zeus being the one eating the liver) as he is chained to a rock, and everyday his liver would regrow and the process would recommence.

In terms of his namesake, Prometheus means "forethought." This would elude to his knowing of the effects of his actions and trickery against the Titans. In doing so, the question raised is did he do it despite his knowing? In reading the poem "Prometheus" by Lord Byron, written in 1816, we can conclude a few things on behalf of Prometheus. 

Adaptations and Appeals to the Romantic Era: Looking at the Modern

Lord Byron’s poem “Prometheus” is based off of the Greek mythological legend. In the poem, Byron is exemplifying Prometheus’s character as the theme of defiance and constancy. The perception of Eternity is magnified to include the terms wretched and torture to give credence to the perpetual boon Prometheus is forced to endure. Stanza II goes into detail, stating:

Titan! to thee the strife was given

Between the suffering and the will,

Which torture where they cannot kill;

And the inexorable Heaven,

And the deaf tyranny of Fate,

The ruling principle of Hate,

Which for its pleasure doth create

The things it may annilate,

Refus’d thee even the boon to die:

The wretched gift of Eternity

Was thine — and thou hast borne it well. (2.1-11)

The capitalization of Heaven, Fate, Hate, and Eternity provide context behind Byron’s purpose for their inclusion into the poem. Heaven is capitalized for religious design, but Fate and Hate provide a different context and allude to Greek mythology once more. The Three Fates of mythology, whom cross multiple cultures and come in various forms, are probably most known as the three sisters that spin the thread of life for each individual. The context here in regards to Prometheus is interesting concerning his projected Eternity. However, if we put the story of the Three Fates into context with the story of Prometheus, we see why Byron would include them within his poem. For one, Zeus is the one to condemn Prometheus for his “Godlike crime” for eternal suffering (3.1). However, Zeus does not reign power over the Three Fates, but rather speaks in unison with them on the death of someone — he does not have power of the death or life of that person. The Three Fates reign jurisdiction over this portion of all kind, and therefore would be able to conquer Zeus’s design. At the end of Byron’s poem, he closes with “Triumphant where it dares defy, / And making Death a Victory” (3.24-5). Byron is alluding to the previously mentioned Man in the same stanza (“Like thee, Man is in part divine, / A troubled stream from a pure source; / And Man in portions can foresee / His own funereal destiny” (3.13-6)), but also alluding to Prometheus’s ability to overcome the perpetual suffering endowed him from his act of kindness unto mankind in both eventual death or freedom (death may serve as a form of freedom as it serves as a form of Victory).

Byron as Prometheus

It may be read into the text that Byron is placing himself in the shoes of Prometheus himself. However, it may also be read that Prometheus is symbolic for many figures and alludes to the anti-hero often perpetuated during the Romantic era for the purpose of giving the people someone to attribute their aspiration for change. This individual has come in many forms, such as Robin Hood, and is positioned as an individual that commits crimes but for good reason or to do good for the people.

In this same way we may look at Prometheus. He stole fire from the Titans and gave it to mankind, therefore breaking away the connotations associated with civilizations absent of fire as barbaric and infantile. In doing so, not only did he aid the Olympians in the war against the Titans (as mentioned prior), but he stepped into that symbolic role of the anti-hero figure so instrumental to the radicalization of society and ways of life.

 In stepping into this role, Byron is not becoming the anti-hero but his poem rather alludes to the oppression of figures in power to those below. His commentary becomes political and speaks to his own role in speaking against the House of Lords in both satirical commentary and poetic form. Many of his speeches spoke out on the subject of injustice towards working peoples, specifically speaking on the automaton and the Luddites, and even on the subject of Catholic emancipation.

The end of prometheus

In context to Prometheus’s story from a mythological point of view, there are multiple renditions of resolutions that have complimented his eternal suffering. In some stories he is freed by Heracles, in others he is left to endure. However, the purpose of using Prometheus within the Romantic era is not only to fetish this idea of the anti-hero, but to comment on the forwards progression of mankind of that all effort to improve the human condition may be for naught. However, by contextualizing the story of Prometheus with mythological understanding and Romantic background, it can be understood that Prometheus’s story also speaks to the oppression felt by many of these Romantic writers to write against the grain and produce works that were not specifically canon.

Reference:

Byron, Lord. “Prometheus.” Romanticism: An Anthology, 4th ed., edited by Duncan Wu, 2012, pp. 912-3.

Lord Byron and Lording of Ludd: Luddite Literature in 19th Century Texts

Illustration of the Fictitious Leader of the Luddites, General Ludd.

Illustration of the Fictitious Leader of the Luddites, General Ludd.

 

Luddites and Literature

The Luddites were known as a group of individuals, machine workers, primarily textile workers, that retaliated against the introduction of advanced industrialization as machinery increasingly advanced and dissolved jobs. Otherwise known as a guild or secret society, the Luddites were sworn to secrecy of their uprisings that had political ramifications and influences, using the alias King Ludd to write their proclamations and demands in letters to their government (of Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire, and Lancashire). As such, a majority of the literature procured from these Luddites was retrieved via government spies whom would listen in on Luddite songs and chants and transcribe what they heard. Thus, many of the poems, songs, and pieces of literature are written by Anon., and only few are given credit to a specific writer that were primarily those that supported the movement. Of such was Lord Byron, the swaggering poet and novelist of the 19th century whom was, in large, a supporter of the Luddites and what they were fighting against.

(King) Nedd Ludd

Per political purposes, the Luddites were in conversation with the high Lords of government to voice their purpose, threats, and demands for jobs. However, due to their institution of secrecy, the Luddites adopted a leader of their society and deemed him (King) Nedd Ludd. Though not a real person, the influence behind King Ludd is found in songs, chants, and the literature of the Luddites and reciprocated by supporters of the movement. Political letters would be signed by King Ludd and the leader would be compared to godly proportions with powers that could control elements, of incredibly influence, and unnaturally mighty. The figure was created in lieu of a figure and to signify the might of the Luddites as a political movement and guild. 

Lord Byron

Lord Byron was an influential poet and novelist of the 19th century, and known for his support of the Luddites. In "Letter from Lord Byron to Lord Holland, Feb. 25 1812," Byron is addressing Lord Holland on the subject of  the frame-work bill meant to pass through parliament that would "drive [the Luddites] into actual rebellion." This would be in comparison to the acts already committed on the machinery that has taken the jobs of the Luddites (though often with an Enoch sledgehammer and rebellious). 

Byron makes the argument for the work of hands versus the work of autonomous machines by stating the latter is "far inferior in quality, hardly marketable at home, and hurried over with a view to exportation." He argues that the work by hands is far better in quality and product than that spit out by the autonomy and power of industry. Furthermore, his argument fights for the purpose of the Luddites in stating that they should be pitied rather than punished: "Condemning, as every one must condemn, the conduct of these wretches, I believe in the existence of grievances which call rather for pity than punishment."

In his letter "Debate on the Frame-Work Bill, In the House of Lords, February 27, 1812," Byron continues to further his argument in support of the guild of Luddites and the retaliating actions of these workers now out of jobs. In part of his letter, he makes the argument against the negative interpretation of mob nature as shown by the Luddites in the destruction of these machines. He states that "[the Lordships on the Frame-Work Bill] call these men a mob, desperate, dangerous, and ignorant; and seem to think that the only way to quiet the 'Bellua multorum capitum' is to lop off a few of its superfluous heads. But reduced to reason by a mixture even a mob may be better of conciliation and firmness, than by additional irritation and redoubled penalties. Are we aware of our obligations to a mob?" He continues on to state, "[the Lordships on the Frame-Work Bill] may call the people a mob; but do not forget that a mob too often speaks the sentiments of the people." Byron is refuting the idea of a mob in negative contexts as desperate and ignorant and displacing these common conceptions by the Lordships of government with an understanding that a mob often speaks on behalf of the people as a whole, or a majority of the working class in the case of the Luddites.

Satire. Rhetoric. Satirical Rhetoric.

The use of satire as a rhetorical device by Byron and the Luddites in song and chant is evidently apparent. Specifically looking at Lord Byron's works, we can use terminology meant to be satirical and prove a purpose for incitement of the reader. Such as the poem he included at the end of his letter to Thomas Moore entitled "Song for the Luddites, 1816," he uses terms that correspond with textile work such as "web that we weave" and "winding-sheet" (9-11). He uses the word dye in line 13 to perform as both a nod to the Luddites themselves but also to infer the blood spilled by King Ludd, the fictitious leader of the Luddites. 

The use of satire and clever humor goes beyond this poem, however, and used by anonymous writers in titles and writing of Luddite poetry. Many of the rhetorical purposes of these poems were intended for the easy remembrance of the words to recite. Intended humor in the title or poems themselves (as Lord Byron also uses) were used as a rhetorical device as well (i.e., by anon. "An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill" which eludes to the framing of the poem). Suggestions to the ambitions and capabilities of King Ludd also lend to satirical writing such as the poem "General Ludd's Triumph" by anon.. In this poem, imagery is used for symbolic purposes, such as the General Ludd's "conquering Sword" that eludes to an executioner and the beheading of Luddites (38). Such imagery is commonplace throughout the contents of Luddite literature and influential figures that supported Luddite rebellion.

 

Sourced:

Byron, Lord. "Debate on the Frame-Work Bill, In the House of Lords (Lord Byron's Speech)," 1812. Retrieved from http://www.luddites200.org.uk/LordByronspeech.html.

Byron, Lord. "Letter from Lord Byron to Lord Holland," 1812. Retrieved from https://www.gutenberg.org/files/9921/9921-h/9921-h.htm#L226.

Anonymous, "Luddite Poetry and Songs." Retrieved from http://www.luddites200.org.uk/documents/Ludditesongs.pdf.