The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster]

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Hauptverfasser: Adams, Carol J. (VerfasserIn), Buchanan, Douglas (VerfasserIn), Gesch, Kelly (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: New York [u.a.] Continuum 2007
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Datensatz im Suchindex

_version_ 1819653721973325824
adam_text Contents The Monster of Them AII ...................................................................................11 capsule: Victor Frankenstein s Story, Part I .....................................................15 I Am Galvanized: Frankenstein Science, Then and Now ....................................22 sidebar.· Dexter s Laboratory .............................................................................26 sidebar: Charge It: When the Monster Gets Wired .........................................27 Ten Easy Steps for Setting up a Mad Scientist Laboratory & Creating Your Very Own Blasphemy ............................................................28 sidebar: The Word Monster ..........................................................................30 sidebar: The Importance of Parents ................................................................32 Fainting Spells: The Monster Onstage ................................................................34 In 1823, the Monster gained an unnamed but starring role on the Stage and has seemed reluctant to relinquish it since. The Electrifying Monster: Film Takes to the Monster ........................................39 From the beginning of movies themselves the Monster has been there, starting uith Edison Studios Kinetogram in 1910. Suture Self: Boris Karloff, Not Bela Lugosi, Sews up a Big Role ........................46 sidebar: June 16................................................................................................50 Perhaps the most important day in literature. Hint: waking dreams and a man named Leopold. sidebar: Bolt Upright: The Monster Walks .......................................................51 Does the Subtitle Explain It AH? The Modern Prometheus ................................54 sidebar: Prometheus at the Movies: What s Worth Bringing (Back) to Life? .................................................................................................58 Sci-Fi Movies and tfie theme of Frankenstein THE BEDSIDE, BATHTUB AND ARMCHAIR COMPANION TO FRANKENSTEIN Making a Monster the Van Helsing Way ............................................................61 sidebar: How to Make Your Own Frankenstein Monster .................................63 If you want to get out of your bed, bath, or armchair and try your hand at the messy work of creation, here are all the ingredients you might need. Mary Shelley Tells a Birth Story: The Teenager Who Wrote Frankenstein .........64 map: Maty Shelley, the Fecund Writer ...............................................................70 A map showing the travels of Mary and Percy Shelley in 1814 and 1816. (Victor Frankenstein will follow in their steps.) A Selection from Mary Shelley s Reading Lists, 1814-16....................................72 SIDEBAR: Frankenstein in Common Parlance .....................................................74 Doing the OED one better, we provide all possible explanations f or the origin of the word Frankenstein. excerpt: Victor Goes to the Mountains and Meets the Creature .....................75 sidebar: How Sublime! .....................................................................................78 capsule: An Orphan s Tale — The Monster s Story ...........................................79 Frankenstein in the Funnies ................................................................................85 sidebar: Dan Piraro: Why I Like Drawing Frankenstein s Monster ..................87 Sit Down!: Frankenstein s Monster for Children .................................................88 sidebar: The First Flower Child and the Change in the Message of the 1931 Frankenstein ......................................................................................94 Why I m a Vegetarian. An Exclusive Interview with the Monster .......................97 No, it s not for health, he asserts, though he attributes his long life to his veg¬ etarian diet excerpt: Victor Describes How the Monster Demands a Mate .....................100 capsule: Victor Frankenstein s Story, Part II ..................................................101 MAP: Here There Be Monsters. A Map of Victors Travels to Scotland and Back, until His Marriage .........................................................................106 sidebar: It Wasn t Incest! Victor Frankenstein Defends His Marriage to His First Cousin .............................................................................................108 A Good Cast Is Worth Repeating: Bride of Frankenstein ................................. HO The 1935 film may be the best horror movie ever made. How James Whale and the cast and crew achieved it. sidebar: I Was the Bride of Frankenstein. Elsa Lanchester ............................1 i3 Pyramid Themes: Frank in Egypt, Intentionally or Not (an Acrostic) ...............115 sidebar: The Creation of the Second Monster ...............................................1 i7 Frankenstein: The Musical? ............ ..........119 Table of Contents sidebar: Rocky Horror Picture Show ..............................................................122 SONG: Frankenstein s Valentine ........................................................................124 capsule: All at Sea : Walton s Story ..............................................................126 Polar Opposites: Does Victor Renounce Over-reaching and Will Walton? .......132 The Jabbermock: A Cautionary Tale on Messing in God s Domain without a Permission Slip, in the Style of Lewis Carroll .............................................134 Monsters on Ice .................................................................................................135 Lurching Ever Onward: Charles Addams, Ted Cassidy, and the Monster ........137 The Monster Gets a First Name: Television Embraces the Comic Side of Horror ................................................................................................139 SIDEBAR: Living with the Munsters in Waxahachie, Texas ..............................140 From Ice-olation to the Fireside Hearth and Back Again: The Story Takes Shape ..................................................................................................141 sidebar: Safie s Independent Mother and Mary Wollstonecraft .....................143 Does Mary Shelley place her mother in the center of the noveli Simulacrum and Disfigurations .........................................................................146 The story line in the novel versus the 1931 film Missing Persons Advertisements .......................................................................148 Several key people in the novel are absent from the 1931 film. We place some advertisements in hopes of finding them. puzzler: A Frankenstein Quiz .........................................................................150 13 Ways of Looking at Frankenstein (with apologies to Wallace Stevens) ........151 Scholars have heen busy explaining Frankenstein; with so many theories abound¬ ing, we provide the abridged explanations. SIDEBAR: Of Gods, Monsters, and Homosexual Panic .....................................155 What to Do if You Meet a Monster: An Etiquette Guide .................................158 Don t worry. Our Miss Monsters addresses all your concerns — what not to say, what not to serve, what not to do. The Son of the Bride in the House of the Ghost of Frankenstein; Successor Universal Movies after Whale .......................................................160 Collectors: An Interview with Donald Glut .......................................................162 The novelist, amateur filmmaker, and author of The Frankenstein Catalog, describes his introduction to the idea of the Monster as a teenager, his Frankenstein films, and what surprises him most. Bill of Lading to Chick Young and Wilbur Grey ...............................................165 A bill of lading that demonstrates what happens when weirds collide. More precisely, when Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein, the Wolfman, and Dracula (with a guest non-appearance by the Invisible Man). THE BEDSIDE, BATHTUB AND ARMCHAIR COMPANION TO FRANKENSTEIN ,.,. .............167 Monsterbilia ................................................................................... He s everywhere] Frankenstein action figures, lights, canales, salt-and-pepper shakers nutcrackers, earrings, napkin holaers, masks, soft cuddlies and other monsterbilia run amok throughout the hook. How the Monster has become both myth and icon. sidebar: The Way of all (Pumpkin) Flesh ....................................................... 169 How They Died ................................................................................................. 170 They were all together on the night of the ghost story in 1816 and many of their deaths were strange, some were tragic; one inspired Henry James. How Byron, Polidori, Clairmont, Percy, and Mary Shelley went to their graves. (Or not.) SIDEBAR: Fire and Ice in the Frankenstein Story ............................................. 17 A Hammered-out Plot ....................................................................................... 175 puzzler: A Monstrous Crossword Puzzle ........................................................ 17° Herr Frankenstein Is Greatly Changed ............................................................. 180 Comic hook artists draw on the Monster s story. sidebar: The Role of Women in Monster Comics .......................................... I -5 SIDEBAR: The Postmodern Prometheus ............................................................* The Animated Director: ..................................................................................... 187 Tim Burtons windmills and other Frankenstein icons that find their-way into the strangest places in Burtons films. Oh yes, a teenie-weenie dog, too (well, all right, not a teenie-weenie one hut a Frankenweenie dog). Collectors: An Interview with Forrest J Ackerman ............................................ One of the authors makes a pilgrimage to Los Angeles to meet the man who was there at the heginning of the Universal phenomenon. What a history! What a collection! And, yes, she touched Dracula s cape on her way out. All Stitched Up: The 1818 versus 1831 Editions: A Publishing History ...........193 Frankenstein v. Bialystock ..................................................................................1 What better way to pay homage to the achievement of Young Frankenstein, itself a wacky homage to the 1930s Frankenstein films, than to inhabit Mel Brooks s imaginea world and push at the edges? Yes, Bialystock is in trouble again. A Frankenstein Film Test: Can You Identify Which Films Were Never Made? .................................................................................................. 200 A Frank Success: The Frankenstein Stamp ....................................................... 2 You ve Been Overexposed. A Memo from the Monster s Agent ...................... 20¿ Putting the Monster Behind You .......................................................................204 Acknowledgments ..............................................................................................207 Answers to a Frankenstein Film Test and the Crossword Puzzle ......................20» 10
any_adam_object 1
author Adams, Carol J.
Buchanan, Douglas
Gesch, Kelly
author_facet Adams, Carol J.
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Gesch, Kelly
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dewey-hundreds 800 - Literature (Belles-lettres) and rhetoric
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dewey-raw 823/.7
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dewey-sort 3823 17
dewey-tens 820 - English & Old English literatures
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spellingShingle Adams, Carol J.
Buchanan, Douglas
Gesch, Kelly
The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster]
Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft 1797-1851 Characters Frankenstein
Shelley, Mary 1797-1851 Frankenstein (DE-588)4220200-0 gnd
Frankenstein (Fictitious character) Miscellanea
Horror tales, English Miscellanea
Scientists in literature Miscellanea
Monsters in literature Miscellanea
Frankenstein films
subject_GND (DE-588)4220200-0
title The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster]
title_auth The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster]
title_exact_search The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster]
title_full The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster] Carol Adams, Douglas Buchanan & Kelly Gesch
title_fullStr The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster] Carol Adams, Douglas Buchanan & Kelly Gesch
title_full_unstemmed The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster] Carol Adams, Douglas Buchanan & Kelly Gesch
title_short The bedside, bathtub & armchair companion to Frankenstein
title_sort the bedside bathtub armchair companion to frankenstein an electrifying guide to the world s most famous monster
title_sub [an electrifying guide to the world's most famous monster]
topic Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft 1797-1851 Characters Frankenstein
Shelley, Mary 1797-1851 Frankenstein (DE-588)4220200-0 gnd
Frankenstein (Fictitious character) Miscellanea
Horror tales, English Miscellanea
Scientists in literature Miscellanea
Monsters in literature Miscellanea
Frankenstein films
topic_facet Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft 1797-1851 Characters Frankenstein
Shelley, Mary 1797-1851 Frankenstein
Frankenstein (Fictitious character) Miscellanea
Horror tales, English Miscellanea
Scientists in literature Miscellanea
Monsters in literature Miscellanea
Frankenstein films
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