Frankenstein Contents
- Social / political context
- Religious / philosophical context
- Literary context
- The Bible: Creation: see Religious / philosophical context
- The Prometheus myth
- The doppelganger
- The monster's reading: Plutarch, Milton and Goethe
- The Romantics: Coleridge, Lamb, Southey, de Quincey
- Introduction
- Title page to the first edition
- Preface
- Volume 1
- Volume 2
- Volume 3
How Frankenstein came to be written
Conception: 1816
The Villa Deodati
In the Introduction to the 1831 edition of Frankenstein, Mary Shelley describes the circumstances in which the novel was conceived. She and Shelley, together with Mary's step-sister, Claire Clairmont, travelled to Switzerland in May 1816, where Lord Byron joined them two weeks later. Claire and Byron had become lovers in England and she was anxious to resume their relationship. Byron soon moved on to the Villa Deodati on the shore of Lake Geneva, where the Shelleys and Claire were frequent visitors. Also at the Villa was Byron's doctor, a young man called John Polidori.
Defying convention
The stage was set for some highly dramatic events. The emotional temperature among the group of young people was quite high: all were in one way or another defying social convention by being together. Issues were:
- the two central relationships between the Shelleys and Byron and Claire Clairmont
- it is possible that Shelley and Claire had had an affair in the summer of 1815
- Polidori seems to have fallen a little in love with Mary.
Weather
The summer of 1816, cold and rainy, was one of the worst on record – it became known as ‘the year without a summer': as Mary writes in the 1831 Introduction, ‘it proved a wet, ungenial summer, and incessant rain often confined us for days to the house.' During these long spells of enforced confinement, the party entertained themselves with conversations, poetry reading and ghost stories. Shelley seems to have suffered some kind of hysterical attack when Byron read aloud part of Coleridge's supernatural poem ‘Christabel' and had to be treated by a local doctor.
Byron's challenge
It was after they had read a volume of German ghost stories that Lord Byron issued a challenge: that the three men and Mary should each write a ghost story of their own. Byron, Shelley and Polidori quickly thought of ideas for their stories, and both Byron and Shelley soon began to write. Mary Shelley, however, struggled for inspiration. One evening, however, Byron and Shelley talked at length about ‘the nature of the principle of life' (1831 Introduction) and how Dr Erasmus Darwin (See Religious/philosophical context: Erasmus Darwin) had experimented with giving movement to dead matter and with the potential of electrical stimulation.
Mary Shelley's dream
What happened next is best told in Mary Shelley's own words from the 1831 Introduction:
Mary Shelley's first reaction to this dream was to wish that she could think of something as frightening for her own ghost story, but she quickly realised, as she puts it, that ‘What terrified me will terrify others', and soon began to write a tale based upon her own dream.
Composition and publication: 1816 – 1818
Mary Shelley began work on Frankenstein on 16 June 1816 and continued to work on it through the rest of the summer and into the autumn, by which time she and Shelley had returned to England. Events then intervened to interrupt her writing for some time:
- Shelley's first wife drowned herself in early December 1816
- Although he and Mary were now able to marry (they did so on 30 December 1816), there followed a bitter struggle over the custody of Shelley's two children by his wife, Harriet
- After a court case lasting nearly two months, from January to March 1817, Shelley failed to obtain custody of his children.
It is unlikely that Mary was able to write very much during this time.
Completion and publication
Mary completed the story by 10 April 1817 and by 13 May had finished a fair copy to be submitted to a publisher. After two unsuccessful submissions, to Byron and Shelley's own publishers, the novel was accepted for publication by Lackington, Allen and Co.
Percy Shelley had conducted the negotiations with publishers and, as the title page of the first edition shows, the novel was published anonymously (see Frankenstein Synopses: Title page to the first edition). Proofs were therefore sent to Shelley and, with Mary's agreement, he undertook most of the revisions. This is important, because some scholars believe that the revisions made by Shelley to the proofs were so extensive as to make him almost co-author of Frankenstein. The novel was finally published on 11 March 1818 and was dedicated to Mary's father, William Godwin.
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