They Said WHAT?!
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A Word From Our Scholarly Friends...
Words, Words, Words
Oh, Love
100

"It is well. I go; but remember, I shall be with you on your wedding-night".

The Monster

100

What he desires from Victor the FIRST time we see them together (ch. 10).

Victor listening to his story

100

Refers to excessive pride or overconfidence, which drives a person to overstep limits in a way that leads to their downfall.

Hubris

100

Frankenstein is known as the first ________ novel.

Science Fiction

100

A feeling of repulsion; disgusted loathing

Abhorrence

100

This Period of Literature was described as: shifting from a primarily agricultural society, where wealth and power had been concentrated in the landholding aristocracy, to a modern industrial nation.

The Romantic Period

200

"Answer me, I conjure you by our mutual happiness, with simple truth - do you not love another?"

Elizabeth

200

What he desires from Victor the SECOND time we see them together. (ch. 16-17)

Making a female creature for him

200

The tragic flaw that leads to a character's reversal of fate and downfall.

Hamartia

200

A subgenre of the romantic, which focused on the occult, dreams and nightmares, destructive aspects of sexuality, and longing for death

Gothic Fiction

200

A general rule intended to regulate behavior or thought; a writ or warrant

Precept

200

The Period of History was described as: for the leisure class a time of lavish display and moral laxity

The Regency Period

300

"And what was I? Of my creation and creator I was absolutely ignorant, but I knew that I possessed no money, no friends, no kind of property. I was, besides, endued with a figure hideously deformed and loathsome; I was not even of the same nature as man"

The Monster

300

This is how the Creature learns how to read and write.

From watching the DeLacey family

300

The name of classical punishment for Hubris

Nemesis

300

Literary technique in which an introductory or main narrative provides the foundation for another story to emerge. It is sometimes referred to as a story within a story.

Frame Story

300

Satisfied to the full

Satiated

300

This type of Foreshadowing reveals only particular details about what will happen within a text.

Partial / Mysterious Foreshadowing

400

“Begone! I do break my promise; never will I create another like yourself, equal in deformity and wickedness”

Victor Frankenstein

400

The reason he murders William. 

To get revenge on Frankenstein / get his attention

400

The difference between the classical and modern definition of "Hubris"

Classical - specifically to a defiance of the gods or of divine order.

Modern - defiance of other types of authority, such as a general disregard for the limits of human capability.

400

Type of novel which features themes of: tales set in dark, macabre past, elements of mystery and terror

Gothic Novel

400

Feelings of anxiety or dismay, typically at something unexpected

Consternation

400

Awe in the face of the natural world’s extreme beauty and greatness

The Sublime

500

"I see by your eagerness and the wonder and hope which your eyes express, my friend, that you expect to be informed of the secret with which I am acquainted; that cannot be; listen patiently until the end of my story..."

Victor Frankenstein

500

This is how he frames Justine for murder.

Placing the Caroline's locket (and then William's) in her pocket

500

The three functions of Hubris in literature...

- Serves a Cautionary Purpose

- Propels a Story's Plot

- Makes Characters Relatable

500

Type of novel which features themes of: the lower classes, helplessly subject to the power and privilege of the ruling class

The Novel of Purpose

500

Show or declare that (someone) is not guilty of wrongdoing

Exculpate

500

Name at least 3 of the 5 characteristics of Romantic Period Art...

- The Sublime

- Individualism (range of psychological and emotional states; the supernatural)

- Animals (nature and psychology)

- Imaginary and Exotic Subjects

- Revolution