Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Mary Shelleys Frankenstein and Satanic-Promethean Ideals Essay
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Satanic-Promethean Ideals     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   Mary Shelley's  Frankenstein is a novel in conscious dialogue with canonical classics and  contemporary works. It contains references to Coleridge, Wordsworth, and P. B.  Shelley, but also to Cervantes and Milton. It is the latter's Paradise Lost  which informs the themes and structure of the novel more than any other source.  Like many of her contemporaries, Mary Shelley draws parallels between Milton's  Satan and the Titan Prometheus of Greek myth. However, the two are not simply  equated (as in Byron's poem, "Prometheus"), but appear in various facets through  both Victor Frankenstein and his creation. Furthermore, God, Zeus, and Adam are  also evoked through these characters. Though its treatment of these mythical  figures identifies it with Romantic Satanism,1[1] Frankenstein reaches a moral  conclusion at odds with the ideals of Shelley's contemporaries, and far closer  to those of Milton.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The novel's alternative title is "The Modern  Prometheus." It can be asked who in the story is supposed to be Promethean.  Since this title is the alternative to "Frankenstein," it seems obvious that the  doctor is meant, although it will be shown later that the monster also bears  significant similarities to the Titan.      Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   According to the Greek myth, Prometheus (whose  name means "forethought"), against the will of Zeus, stole fire from the gods  and gave it to humans. With fire came the beginning of a crafts and civilisation  itself. In this respect, Victor Frankenstein's quest for knowledge is  Promethean, as is his belief that his researches will benefit humanity.      Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The other consequence of the theft of fire is  that it in...              ...  knowledge, causing their fall from a happy innocent existence.     4[4]Ã   It must be made clear that this is a Christian myth. In Judaism,  Satan is as much a servant of God as any other angel, it being his peculiar role  to test humans and record their failures. Without understanding this, the story  of Job loses its meaning-God sends Satan to test Job. The Jewish Satan has no  relation to the serpent of the Eden story. The equivocation is Christian.  Christianity's devil and its stark good vs. evil cosmic war derive from  Zoroastrianism, not Judaism, just as its doctrine of the immortal soul derives  from Platonism. There is no good vs. evil in Judaism, there is just God, and  immortality is the privilege of God and the angels, not humans.     5[5] This phrase is borrowed from Friedrich Nietzsche, vide Genealogy of  Morals, Beyond Good and Evil, and The Antichrist.                      
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