The following paper aims to analyse the relationship between body and power in Mary Shelley's famous novel, read from a gender perspective. The aim is to highlight how these two elements influence each other in the narrative, creating an antagonistic tension between male and female characters, but also between normative and non-normative bodies. Firstly, the role and importance of the respective characters will be analysed, identifying men as the protected part of an essentially patriarchal society, which entrusts them with all the necessary means to maintain and defend their power, exercised to the detriment of women, victims of such arrogance, despite the fact that they themselves hold a much greater power - reproduction - and for this reason feared and silenced, emphasising the (proto)feminist instances of the work. Secondly, the relationship between the normative body of Victor Frankenstein and the non-normative body of his Creature will be analysed, proposing a vision of his monstrous body and the obsessive, almost homoerotic relationship that binds creator and creature, filtered through a queer perspective. Starting with an introduction to the context and biography of the author herself, which will be fundamental to understanding the genesis of the work, we will outline how Frankenstein can be considered not only a “modern creation myth”, but also highly “contemporary”.
Il seguente elaborato si propone di analizzare il rapporto che intercorre nel binomio corpo-potere all’interno del celebre romanzo di Mary Shelley, letto tramite una prospettiva di genere. Lo scopo risulta essere quello di mettere in luce come questi due elementi si influenzino vicendevolmente nella narrazione, creando una tensione antagonistica tra personaggi maschili e femminili, ma anche tra corpi normativi e non-normativi. In primo luogo, si prenderanno in analisi il ruolo e l’importanza dei rispettivi personaggi, individuando negli uomini la parte protetta da una società essenzialmente patriarcale, che affida loro tutti i mezzi necessari per mantenere e difendere il proprio potere, esercitato a discapito delle donne, vittime di tale tracotanza, nonostante siano esse stesse detentrici di un potere ben maggiore -la riproduzione-, per questo temute e silenziate, sottolineando le istanze (proto)femministe dell’opera. In secondo luogo, si analizzerà il rapporto tra il corpo normativo di Victor Frankenstein e quello non-normativo della sua Creatura, proponendo una visione del suo corpo mostruoso e della relazione ossessiva, quasi omo-erotica, che lega creatore e creatura, filtrata da una prospettiva queer. Partendo da un’introduzione del contesto e della biografia della stessa autrice, che risulterà fondamentale per la comprensione della genesi dell’opera stessa, si giungerà a delineare come Frankenstein possa essere considerato non solo un “mito della creazione moderno”, ma anche fortemente “contemporaneo”.
Tra corpo e potere: una prospettiva di genere in "Frankenstein" di Mary Shelley
FRITZ, ANDREA VITTORIA ALFEA
2025/2026
Abstract
The following paper aims to analyse the relationship between body and power in Mary Shelley's famous novel, read from a gender perspective. The aim is to highlight how these two elements influence each other in the narrative, creating an antagonistic tension between male and female characters, but also between normative and non-normative bodies. Firstly, the role and importance of the respective characters will be analysed, identifying men as the protected part of an essentially patriarchal society, which entrusts them with all the necessary means to maintain and defend their power, exercised to the detriment of women, victims of such arrogance, despite the fact that they themselves hold a much greater power - reproduction - and for this reason feared and silenced, emphasising the (proto)feminist instances of the work. Secondly, the relationship between the normative body of Victor Frankenstein and the non-normative body of his Creature will be analysed, proposing a vision of his monstrous body and the obsessive, almost homoerotic relationship that binds creator and creature, filtered through a queer perspective. Starting with an introduction to the context and biography of the author herself, which will be fundamental to understanding the genesis of the work, we will outline how Frankenstein can be considered not only a “modern creation myth”, but also highly “contemporary”.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/106730