The looks comparable to Hitchcock's book in term of offering a comprehensive history of the Frankenstein tradition, but the sections are broken into smaller units and (I think) it has more illustrations. Sadly, it appears out of print.
Frankenstein: Icon of Modern Culture
http://www.helm-information.co.uk/frankenstein.htm
Audrey A. Fisch
Series: Icons of Modern Culture
Helm Information
Books details:
978-1-903206-20-1
320pp
55 illustrations
RRP £38
April 2009
Description:
This is the fifth book in the Icons of Modern Culture series. Children and adults the world over know the lumbering, overlarge figure with the green face and bolts in his head. How did the Halloween staple known as "Frankenstein" emerge out of the anonymous novel by a "young girl," published in 1818 to mixed reviews? The answer, as this study makes clear, is that the "Frankenstein" we know today is not solely Mary Shelley’s progeny. "Frankenstein" morphed into many different forms over time, place, and genre. This volume displays and analyses the many post-Shelley "Frankensteins," exploring their continuities and disjunctions in order to trace the development of this enduring icon. The volume also traces the complex history of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, including its publishing history, its dismissal by the literary establishment, and its subsequent reclamation as a touchstone text in high school and college classrooms. Students of Shelley’s novel or of the many "Frankensteins" her novel propagated will find here an analysis of this intriguing cultural history. This volume also provides extensive extracts, gathering together an unprecedented collection of both never-before published and previously published material, so that readers can read widely and develop their own sense of "Frankenstein’s" place in our world.
Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Series Editor’s Preface
Introduction
Section 1 – Mary Shelley and the first "Frankensteins"
1. Publication
2. Frankenstein, Godwin, and Wollstonecraft
3. Reception
4. Early Science
5. The Nature of Man
6. Percy Shelley and Frankenstein
7. Mary Shelley and Frankenstein
8. Revision and Authorship
Section 2 – Beyond Mary Shelley
9. Early Theatre 1823–1826
10. Victorian Burlesque-Extravaganza
11. Other Victorian "Frankensteins"
12. Silent Film
13. Early Twentieth-Century Drama
14. Whale, Hammer, and Beyond
15. Feminist Canonisation
16. Critical Progeny
17. The Scientific Legacy of "Frankenstein"
18. Contemporary "Frankenstein"
Conclusion: Ubiquitous "Frankenstein"
Appendix: "The Death Bride" from Tales of the Dead
Bibliography
Index
About the author:
Audrey A. Fisch is Professor of English and Coordinator of Secondary English Education at New Jersey City University. She is the editor of The Other Mary Shelley: Beyond Frankenstein and The Cambridge Companion to the African American Slave Narrative and the author of American Slaves in Victorian England: Abolitionist Politics in Popular Literature and Culture.
Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein was published in 1818 and, over 200 years later, still remains a profound influence on modern culture. Frankenstein and the Fantastic, an outreach effort of the Northeast Alliance for the Study of the Fantastic and the Fantastic Areas (Fantasy & Science Fiction and Monsters & the Monstrous) of the Northeast Popular Culture/American Culture Association, is designed as a resource for celebrating the text and its legacy.
Counting down to 2024: The sixtieth anniversary of The Munsters, the fiftieth anniversary of Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder's Young Frankenstein, the fortieth anniversary of Tim Burton's original Frankenweenie, the thirtieth anniversary of Kenneth Branagh’s film Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Universal Studios’ television series Monster Force, the twentieth anniversary of Geof Darrow and Steve Skroce’s comic Doc Frankenstein and Stephen Sommers’s film Van Helsing, and the tenth anniversary of Stuart Beattie’s I, Frankenstein.
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