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Frankenstein (Second Edition) (Norton Critical Editions)
Frankenstein (Second Edition) (Norton Critical Editions) | Mary Shelley
2 posts | 3 read | 1 to read
The best-selling student edition on the market, now available in a Second Edition.Almost two centuries after its publication, Frankenstein remains an indisputably classic text and Mary Shelleys finest work.This extensively revised Norton Critical Edition includes new texts and illustrative materials that convey the enduring global conversation about Frankenstein and its author. The text is that of the 1818 first edition, published in three volumes by Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, and Jones. It is accompanied by an expansive new preface, explanatory annotations, a map of Geneva and its environs, and seven illustrations, five of them new to the Second Edition.Context is provided in three supporting sections: Circumstance, Influence, Composition, Revision, Reception, Impact, Adaptation, and Sources, Influences, Analogues. Among the Second Editions new inclusions are historical-cultural studies by Susan Tyler Hitchcock, William St. Clair, and Elizabeth Young; Chris Baldrick on the novels reception; and David Pirie on the novels many film adaptations. Related excerpts from the Bible and from John Miltons Paradise Lost are now included, as is Charles Lambs poem The Old Familiar Faces.Criticism collects sixteen major interpretations of Frankenstein, nine of them new to the Second Edition. The new contributors are Peter Brooks, Bette London, Garrett Stewart, James. A. W. Heffernan, Patrick Brantlinger, Jonathan Bate, Anne Mellor, Jane Goodall, and Christa Knellwolf.A Chronology and Selected Bibliography are also included.
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Autumnlong
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Oops. I‘ve been listening to Frankenstein a little bit to prepare my brain for reading it, but the edition I‘ve been listening to presents an entirely different backstory for Elizabeth than the assigned 😳

Graywacke Listening to 1831 edition? 6y
Autumnlong @Graywacke yes! I should have been more careful. But oh well, back to the book! 🧐 6y
Graywacke I got an always-available audio from my library - with no edition info. It was the 1831. That was not ideal, because I know the 1817 is darker and more what MS wanted. But I was only listening for fun. Sorry!! 6y
Graywacke I should add, the 1831 has an expanded opening section - which was my favorite part of the book. So, you now got some of that. And you‘re better rounded now. 🙂 6y
Autumnlong @Graywacke yes! I did the same thing. I‘d like to read (or listen!) to both, just not at the same time at the risk of conflating details! 6y
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Autumnlong
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Oh my gosh the end of the semester and my sister being v pregnant has been quite consuming this past week! I just wanted to say hello though I haven‘t got anything especially bookish to say. Although after collecting six copies of Frankenstein accidentally, I am finally reading it for class!

In other news this is an armadillo appliqué that I sewed on to this sweater last night and I‘m very fond of him.

Redwritinghood Very cute! 6y
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