Tuesday, December 7, 2010

The Global Creature

Because post-colonial studies “overlap with those of race and ethnicity studies,” one is able to view Frankenstein through the combination of theories and critiques employed in both schools of thought (Norton 28).

Indeed, it appears to be a study that shares many familiar concepts with our conversations surrounding Frankenstein as “it aims to describe the mechanisms of colonial power, to recover excluded or marginalized ‘subaltern’ voices, and to theorize the complexities of…identity; national belonging; and globalization” (Norton 27).

It is of great interest to imagine that Shelley created a character facing these exact issues itself. The creature does experience being a “marginalized” voice and also questions his identity, not only nationally, but globally! In 17__, the creature had a global perspective: a concept that the twenty-first century reader is wholly familiar with, but one that would have been a hard sell in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It could not identify with any other creatures on the globe because it was not of them, however, its “Otherness” instilled within it a global frame of reference so as to grasp its global place.

How does Frankenstein go against the usual “representations of third world countries” and “the political interests of their makers” (27)?

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