FOR FURTHER READING

Chapter 31786 wordsCompleted

This chapter compiles a concise bibliography for readers who wish to explore Frankenstein beyond the novel itself. It is organized into three sections:

  1. Primary texts by Mary Shelley – complete listings of her novels (Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, 1818 and 1831 editions, The Last Man, Lodore, Mathilda, Valperga) with publication details, as well as her collected letters and journals (Journals of Mary Shelley, 1814‑1844; Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley).

  2. Major influences on Frankenstein – a curated reading list drawn from Shelley’s own notes (1814‑1818) that includes Romantic poetry (Coleridge, Christabel), contemporary science (Davy, Elements of Chemical Philosophy), Enlightenment and revolutionary works (Godwin, An Enquiry…; Rousseau, Émile; Volney, Les Ruines), classic literature (Milton, Paradise Lost; Plutarch, Parallel Lives), and feminist/proto‑feminist texts (Wollstonecraft, Thoughts on the Education of Daughters; A Vindication of the Rights of Woman; Maria, or, The Wrongs of Woman).

  3. Secondary scholarship on Mary Shelley and Frankenstein – representative monographs and edited volumes that trace the novel’s critical reception and cultural impact, such as Chris Baldick’s Frankenstein’s Shadow, Harold Bloom’s Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Steven Earl Forry’s Hideous Progenies, Gilbert & Gubar’s The Madwoman in the Attic, Levine & Knoepflmacher’s The Endurance of Frankenstein, Tim Marshall’s Murdering to Dissect, Anne Mellor’s Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters, Mary Poovey’s The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer, Debra Benita Shaw’s Women, Science, and Fiction, plus surveys by Johanna Smith, Muriel Spark, and Emily W. Sunstein.

The chapter thus provides a ready‑to‑use reference roadmap, guiding readers to original 19th‑century texts, the intellectual currents that shaped Shelley’s imagination, and the major scholarly conversations that have sustained Frankenstein as a focal point of literary, scientific, feminist, and cultural studies.