Ignoring for the moment that Mary Shelley was... Mary Shelley. Ignoring the historical context and the time it was written in, the person who wrote it and the occasion for the writing... where do we as readers stop? If I'm only to analyze the text, how do I know what to include and disregard? Shelley leaves readers a lot of clues as to how the novel should be read, how readers should read. Do I disregard that as it falls under the heading, "author's intentions" or do I keep it because it's in the text?
The monster begins to read, and funny enough, in the style that Iser encourages. The monster "applied much personally to my own feelings and condition" (86). He compares himself to the character, finding himself "similar, yet at the same time strangely unlike the beings concerning whom I read" (86). The monster learns "high thoughts" and how to "admire and love the heroes of past ages" from Plutarch, yet admits that "many things" he read "surpassed...understanding and experience" (86). If we are to apply Fish to the monster-reader, the monster's encounter with the text is one of confusion. Although he was "perfectly unacquainted" with many of the topics he comes across, he still feels "ardour for virtue" and an "abhorrence for vice," allowing them to "take a firm hold on [his] mind" (87). What are we readers, separated from the monster-reader, to take away from this moment? Is this Shelley suggesting tips to potential readers? Her advice on 'what to do when you don't quite understand a text'? If so, she tells us to understand it in our own way, like Iser implies, even if it is inapplicable to us. Even if we encounter things "that surpass our understanding and experience"? I should make assumptions and attempt to draw... something... from the text?
This sounds like terrible advice.
Diana Weinblatt = Pistachioi.
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