Frankenstein

annotated for scientists, engineers, and creators of all kinds

Paperback, 277 pages

English language

Published Feb. 4, 2017 by The MIT Press.

ISBN:
978-0-262-53328-7
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OCLC Number:
958796621

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(2 reviews)

This new critical edition of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein was developed by leading scholars for aspiring scientists, engineers, and medical professionals. This unique framing will make this a core text in promoting and enhancing interdisciplinary dialogue on the nature, roles, and responsibilities of scientists and engineers in society. To be published in time for the 2018 bicentennial of its original publication, this edition will be produced in print and as an enhanced e-book. The e-book will contain the full text of the novel (in the public domain) plus all of the substantial scholarly material that was commissioned and developed for this new edition, including essays by leading scholars, and will be most valuable to students and teachers of ethics. Digital features will include include reader annotation, bookmarking, and multimedia content. -- Provided by publisher.

166 editions

Things I didn't expect

No rating

I had never read this, and I was surprised by a number of things: that we get a detailed account of the monster's learning process (which had me thinking of LLMs), that the Monster is smarter and more rhetorically savvy than Victor, and that the Monster's rhetorical skill is highlighted by Shelley (we hear of the monster's "sophistry" which then had me wondering: Is this where @sophist_monster comes from?

One last thought...this book is tale of what happens when science rejects aesthetics in the name of pure efficiency and function. If Victor had cared at all about what the monster looked like, then the entire story unfolds quite differently. The monster's hideous "countenance" (Shelley's favorite word by far, btw) is why he can't have a connection with person, regardless of how much he craves that connection.

Wollte ich schon lange lesen

"Frankenstein oder Der moderne Prometheus" von Mary Shelley wollte ich schon lange mal lesen und nachdem ich mir selbst zu Weihnachten einen Tolino geschenkt hatte und feststellte, das es ne kostenlose EPUB davon gab, hab ich das nun endlich mal getan. Ich hatte schon mal ein, zwei Kurzgeschichten von Edgar Allan Poe gelesen und hatte mich auf einen nicht so ganz leicht zu lesenden Text eingestellt, doch wurde ich positiv überrascht. Der Text lässt sich sehr leicht und gut lesen. Vor allem die ersten Kapitel, in den Viktor das "Ungeheuer" erschafft und dann die Passagen, in denen sie später miteinander interagieren oder der Bericht des "Ungeheuers", wie es ihm nach seiner Erschaffung erging, war wirklich richtig spannend und mitreißend. Die Kapitel hatte ich dann meist auch richtig schnell durch, weil sie mich so gefesselt haben. Dem gegenüber steht aber leider ein Problem, das sich meiner Meinung nach viele Texte der …

Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Monsters
  • Science in literature
  • Scientists