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Shelley as woman writer of science fiction
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M13 Mary Shelleys Frankenstein the first
3.2. Shelley as woman writer of science fiction
Donawerth examines in her work Frankenstein’s daughters: woman writing science fiction (1997) to what extent women in a world mostly dominated by male power were able to write about a male theme, namely science. She asks how women could write science fiction, if science denied them access to be agent-scientists and considers nature to be female in order to exercise control over it (178). As a boy, “the world was to [Frankenstein] a secret which [he] desired to divine“ (Frankenstein ii, 35) and he early felt “the enticements of science“ (iv, 48). He felt “gladness akin to rapture“ through his “earnest research to learn the hidden laws of nature” (ii, 35). His “object of pursuit” (iv, 49) was “the inner spirit of nature” and “the physical secrets of the world” (ii, 36). After showing enthusiasm for alchemists, Frankenstein quickly realizes that their knowledge is obsolete. At college, he is again fascinated by science. His professor, M. Waldman praises “the modern masters” of science who “penetrate into the recesses of nature and show how she works in her hiding-places” (iii, 46). Donawerth emphasizes master and her: Frankenstein represents the male scientist who wants to dominate the female nature. The scientist chases after nature, exposes her and reveals her, infiltrates her, and pleasures in his mastery (xix). 16 Furthermore Donawerth points out how Shelley gives her female voice to a male issue: For Mary Shelley, male narration, of course, was a solution as well as a problem, as it has become for many later women writers of science fiction: male narration allows a woman to enact vicariously a tale of adventure, a triumph of science, in a sexist society that rarely allows the female person such freedoms (Donawerth xxiv). In women’s science fiction, women “redefine science and its discourses so that science responds to women’s issues (such as reproduction)” (Donawerth 178) as Shelley did in Frankenstein, ‘giving birth’ to an artificial human. Download 180.37 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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