Wednesday, December 8, 2010

The Creature Said

I see that many posts have considered Frankenstein as the paradigmatic colonizer, and I suspect that we will have very heated class discussions about the Creature as a colonized entity and its relation to Spivak’s notions of the subaltern, but to what extent is the Creature to be considered a colonizer? While the story Shelley’s devises between Safie and Felix is problematic on its own, the Creature’s narration of that story is of particular interest. In its delivery of Safie’s portion of the cottage narrative the Creature seems to adopt or partake in certain strategies and discourses associated with colonizer. Even if one were to argue that the Creature does not so clearly communicate through its narrative European imperialist conventions, the Creature’s representation of Safie, her father and the cottagers’ interaction with her does seem to suggest an underlying sense of difference. Safie’s father is referred to as “the unfortunate Mahometan” in the relation of his being sentenced to jail (Shelley 82). It seems peculiar to stress the religion of an unjustly convicted individual, but then the Creature presumably learns from the cottagers that Safie’s father’s “religion and wealth” are the cause of his incarceration (Shelley 82). For the rest of the narrative, Safie’s father is simply referred to as the Turk. The Creature’s representation of Safie is usually infused with emphases of the sensual and exotic. In his study of the study of Orientalism, Said addresses authority in terms of “strategic location” and “strategic formation” (1881). Said’s meta-study explains strategic location as the “way of describing the author’s position in a text with regard to the Oriental material he writes about”, while strategic formulation refers to an analysis of the “relationship between texts and the way in which groups of texts, types of texts, even textual genres, acquire mass, density, and referential power among themselves and thereafter in the culture at large” (1881). How does the portion of the Creature’s narrative that is devoted to Safie fit in with these concepts and concerns? Ostensibly, the Creature’s means of representation and signification of Safie in the narrative could be seen as the regurgitation of that which it observed and then internalizes from the cottagers, but what of the Creature’s description of its initial reactions and feelings towards Safie? The Creature may have be availed previous, even if unconsciously, inculcation or means of conceptualizing Safie as a member of ‘the orient’ from the readings (like Paradise Lost) and discussion of the cottagers. Its reactions to Safie seem to be strikingly consistent throughout. Does this suggest inherent feelings in the Creature toward Safie or inherent and essential aspects of Safie’s character? Or may this consistency in reaction and representation be an implied example of the Creature revising and editing his experience, or authority?

No comments:

Post a Comment