Re-specting the Face as the Moral (of) Fiction in Mary Shelley's _Frankenstein_ - Université de Lille
Article Dans Une Revue Modern Language Notes Année : 1994

Re-specting the Face as the Moral (of) Fiction in Mary Shelley's _Frankenstein_

Résumé

This essay reads the recurrence of the trope of the face in Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein. It bring the face into dialogue with Emmanuel Levinas' writings on the subject of the face. Moreover, it argues for a strong link between the Critique of Practical Reason by Immanuel Kant and Mary Shelley's treatment of morality: just as in Kant, monstrosity would be a empirical union of happiness and beauty, in fact only imaginable at the level of the transcendental (i.e., fiction), so, too, in Shelley, the monster is fiction's exposition of transcendental synthesis, and the domestic scene, true horror.

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hal-01588696 , version 1 (17-12-2017)

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Domaine public

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  • HAL Id : hal-01588696 , version 1

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Thomas Dutoit. Re-specting the Face as the Moral (of) Fiction in Mary Shelley's _Frankenstein_. Modern Language Notes, 1994, 109 (5), pp.847-871. ⟨hal-01588696⟩
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