Friday 6 December 2013

Links between Prometheus and Frankenstein


Prometheus makes man from clay and water which compared to the creations of the Gods was going against nature, this theme is also relevant in frankenstein as Victor also revolts against the laws of nature and religious ideas of the time and is punished by his creation because he cannot love it because of its appearance and unnaturalness. Prometheus was also punished by the gods but because he loved his creations more than the gods. 

Prometheus gave the humans fire to allow them to have a better life, this is like the wife Frankenstein tries to create for his monster. Both led to a significant change in the creators lives and did in the end make them both be punished, Zeus created women and Pandora's box and Frankensteins monster haunts him and his bride. 

Both creators try and challenge their Gods by creating and sustaining life and in Prometheus's because they seem to refuse to look accept their own limits.

Zeus gave Prometheus a physical imprisonment of chains, Frankensteins monster gives him a mental imprisonment with the guilt frankenstein feels over the deaths caused by his monster and the fact that he doesn't come clean about it. 

Frankenstein isn't the only Prometheus in the novel though, Robert Walton the sailor is also one because in his desire to reach the North Pole his thirst for knowledge pushes him over the limits and he endangers himself and the crew of the ship and he ends up being punished through death as he isn't allowed to reach his goal. You could say that Walton was more like Prometheus than Frankenstein as Walton was willing to risk his own life for his goal as was Prometheus but Frankenstein ran from his creation.

Thursday 7 November 2013

The story of Prometheus

Prometheus and Epimetheus were spared imprisonment in Tartarus because they had not fought with their fellow Titans during the war with the Olympians. They were given the task of creating man. Prometheus shaped man out of mud, and Athena breathed life into his clay figure.

Prometheus had assigned Epimetheus the task of giving the creatures of the earth their various qualities, such as swiftness, cunning, strength, fur, and wings. Unfortunately, by the time he got to man Epimetheus had given all the good qualities out and there were none left for man. So Prometheus decided to make man stand upright as the gods did and to give him fire.

Prometheus loved man more then the Olympians, who had banished most of his family to Tartarus. So when Zeus decreed that man must present a portion of each animal he scarified to the gods, Prometheus decided to trick Zeus. He created two piles, one with the bones wrapped in juicy fat, the other with the good meat hidden in the hide. He then bade Zeus to pick. Zeus picked the bones. Since he had given his word, Zeus had to accept this pile as his share for future sacrifices. In his anger over the trick, he took fire away from man. However, Prometheus lit a torch from the sun and brought it back again to man. Zeus was enraged that man again had fire. He decided to inflict a terrable punishment on both man and Prometheus.

To punish man, Zeus had Hephaestus create a mortal of stunning beauty. The gods gave the mortal many gifts of wealth. He then had Hermes give the mortal a deceptive heart and a lying tongue. This creation was Pandora, the first woman. A final gift was a jar which Pandora was forbidden to open. Thus completed, Zeus sent Pandora down to Epimetheus, who was staying amongst the men.

Prometheus had warned Epimetheus not to accept gifts from Zeus, but Pandora's beauty was too great and he allowed her to stay. Eventually, Pandora's curiosity about the jar she was forbidden to open became intolerable to her. She opened the jar and out flew all manner of evils, sorrows, plagues, and misfortunes. However, the bottom of the jar held one good thing - hope.

Zeus was angry at Prometheus for three things: being tricked by the scarifices, stealing fire for man, and refusing to tell Zeus which of Zeus's children would dethrone him. Zeus had his servants, Force and Violence, seize Prometheus, take him to the Caucasus Mountains, and chain him to a rock with unbreakable adamanite chains. Here he was tormented day and night by a giant eagle tearing at his liver. Zeus gave Prometheus two ways out of this torment. He could tell Zeus who the mother of the child that would dethrone him was, or meet two conditions. The first was that an immortal must volunteer to die for Prometheus, and the second was that a mortal must kill the eagle and unchain him. Eventually, Chiron the Centaur agreed to die for him and Heracles killed the eagle and unbound him.

Saturday 28 September 2013

Who is Christopher Marlowe?

He pushed the limits of literary form, challenged religion, social and legal norms, he was a free thinker. He was only writing plays for six years in London and in that time he wrote 6 plays Doctor Faustus being the forth. He was the son of shoe maker and attended the king’s school. He won a scholarship to Cambridge University but they refused to let him in because they believed that he had converted to Catholicism but the crown and Privy Council stepped in and allowed him to get his degree, creating rumours that he was an agent for the crown. Marlowe died in a bar fight over a bill and was apparently stabbed in the eye, however many say that it has something to do with being charged of treason only days before his death. Conspiracy theories have abounded since, with Marlowe's atheism and alleged spy activities at the heart of the murder plots. 

Saturday 21 September 2013

Tension between Catholics and Protestants

The tension arised when Henry the eighth decided to split from the church and from Rome and convert England to Protestantism. Edward VI carried this on but then Mary turned England back to Catholicism and then when she died Elizabeth turned it back to how her father had made it, Protestant. The people of England had always been Catholic so the fact that the religion had changed three times in a decade confused and angered them. They were faithful to the church as that was all they knew. However most did not want to speak out against the religion in fear of the death penalty as, if you spoke against the Protestant church you were speaking against the Queen. The Elizabethan people were going through a very difficult time of famine, plague, inflation and war with France and Scotland, the religious upheaval and the violent persecutions as well increased the tensions and as both sides believed that what they were preaching was correct many religious disputes took place.

Who is Mephistopheles?

His first appearance was actually in Dr Faustus, he is now used as a stock character for the devil and is a demon featured a lot in German folklore. He is a shape shifter often used to tempt people into giving up their souls for supernatural power. He is a fallen angel and one of the 7 rulers of hell and according to Cornelius Agrippa (featured in the play, but he was a real person who after his death had been rumored to have been summoning demons) was called Zadkeil who was the archangel of freedom, benevolence and mercy.
Mephistopheles name can translate into two things, in Hebrew it mean Falsehood Plasterer (liar), were as in Greek it means not-light-loving possibly trying to show that he is a polar opposite to Lucifer "light-bearer".

What is a passion play?

A passion play is the dramatic portrayal of the passion of Jesus Christ from the last supper to his Crucifixion. They are plays in which his trail, suffering and death are depicted. It is a traditional part of Lent in various Christian groups, in particular the Roman Catholic Church and the first one was told in Latin in the early 1300's, the Benedictbeurn Passion Play.
In the 1500's certain countries such as Germany opposed them due to the religious conflicts in Europe at that time.  

The Legend of the Extra Devil

In 1594 in a performance of Dr Faustus an audience member said he had counted an extra devil on stage, which terrified the audience and the actors as there was no extra devil cast. This apparently happened more than once and people of that time came to believe that it was the real devil and made Dr Faustus a more famous play as people thought the play was haunted and cursed. 

Wednesday 18 September 2013

Staging notes for Dr Faustus

The way in which you present a play considerably changes it's meaning, these are my ideas about how some things should be performed. 

"Enter the Good Angel and the Evil Angel" 
I would have both angels on stage but above Faustus on separate balconies on opposite sides of the stage. Faustus wouldn't be able to see them but the audience would. Whenever Faustus says something positive or good "fill the public schools with silk" I think he should walk over to the good angel side of the stage but as the things he says get more and more selfish and dark he should walk over to the Evil Angels side of the stage. 
I think its important to keep the stage directions and layout simple as it is a play and the audience will want something to clearly show them the choice Faustus is making. By keeping the angels separate and on opposite sides of the stage you are showing a clear divide and polarity of the two characters and it will be an easy thing for the audience to visually interpret. If Faustus was able to see them then I think you would have a problem with why he did just appear to ignore the Good Angel and the audience may not be able to understand why and I think it would be visually awkward to watch and to try and create a scene like that would be difficult to produce and make it look good, I think it would just come across comical with the Good Angel struggling to get the attention of Faustus. I think if Faustus is walking back and forwards between each Angel will make it appear as if he is struggling to resist the temptation of evil so the audience will have been more sympathetic and looked at him like tragic hero rather than an evil character. And as the play starts out in the style of a greek tragedy I think its important to continue that on throughout the play. 


Tuesday 3 September 2013

The Bloody Chamber - Halfway Through

The Bloody Chamber is a story told in first person retrospective, unusually for a fairy-tale, and is based upon the story of Bluebeard. Although she has completely re-written it which could perhaps go along with my first idea that these are stories that have been passed on through time but have been miss remembered and some things over exaggerated. When I was younger I thought that Bluebeard was in fact a terrible and seriously feared pirate but it appears that I was very wrong. According to Carters version of this story he is a rich gentleman, a Marquis, who had three wives before he marries the new. He appears to have a thing for women who have the potential to be tempted and corrupted which you can see by looking at his previous wives descriptions and by the fact that each time he leaves the key to the forbidden room, the bloody chamber, with his wife, giving them the opportunity to tempted and corrupted. There are two quite clear semantic fields of loss and sexual imagery, and you can see how this story is one of how a girl becomes a woman because of marriage and how the train symbolizes this as its travelling from one destination to another but it could also symbolize her death as well. Furthermore it is quite clearly a story about feminism which you can about tell about two pages in when she says "Our destination, my destination" she is talking about her new house and she will bear an heir being a typical Victorian woman and all.

That's all well and typical of a story but there is a massive problem with this story that must be commented on and that is that the main character is pathetic (the girl not Marquis). Marquis demands her to go down to her death over the phone not even face to face and she does! Who would do that? She has an opportunity to flee but she doesn't, there are many more times when she is as stupid as this such as when she marries the guy. I mean three of his wives are missing and yet she still marries him surely she would have noticed and stayed away from him but she doesn't she goes along with and to make it worse she doesn't even love she is just dong for the money. This makes me more frustrated with her because she is marrying a murderer for lust of money not for love of him.
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The Courtship of Mr Lyon is an adaptation of Beauty and the Beast which is my favourite Disney film of all time so I was slightly apprehensive about reading this one because I didn't want it to ruin it. Carter’s version lies very close to the child's version of the story told in third person in the same style that most fairy-tales are told in; with a few modern changes such a car instead of a horse. Although the woman is still seen as the weaker character as she is in the kitchen doing chores, its the men in the story that are rich not her and all that we know of her is that she is beautiful and that is all the Beast is interested in at first at least. Also she seems unable to be whole without a man/beast "Yet, with this exhilaration, a desolating emptiness". She managed to get freedom and yet all it is that she want is the Beast, she is empty without him.

The Beast despite his looks comes across as nice man even though he does have a voice that is like "a cave full of echoes", as in the beginning of the story we find out that he has made it his custom to pay for all car problems that are called in from his house, he also stays true to his word and allows Beauty to leave when her father’s case is cleared when he was in love with her and could have easily made her stay. He follows the cliché that love fixes all as he goes from Beast to man due to Beauty's love for him and his love for her. It has the same kind of moral of a story that the Disney version has, don't judge a book by its cover, which actually surprised me as I was imaging it to be more like the Bloody Chamber with a more of an adult spin on it. I quite liked the way Carter connected the Beast to the house and how when he was dying the gardens and house to were also going into a state of decay, it made his death seem like more of a significant thing which I don't think she could have achieved without the description of the house, as there wasn't that much of a connection built with characters due to the fact that it was a short story.

Also the way she reverses the characters roles I find interesting. Beauty begins poor and living in a small house with only her fathers. She is the subservient woman and doesn't refuse when her father tells her she must go and have dinner with the Beast. And when the Beast says she is to live him she also doesn't decline even though she wants to. As the story develops she becomes the one that is going around the house and investigating things. When she leaves the Beasts house she goes to London and lives quite a high profiled lifestyle, whilst the Beast is the one hiding from people and the world living in solitude in a tower in his house. So although at first Beauty is timid and scared of the Beast she doesn't stay that way, perhaps it is because she lived with the Beast and survived so has a sense of empowerment from that or perhaps it is because she comes to realise that the Beast is actually more afraid of her and is the one in need from rescuing from the prison (his house) that he has created. Carter appears to have made the Beast the princess and Beauty the knight; as she is the one who saves him in the end.
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The Tigers Bride is another adaptation of Beauty and the Beast and I have to say this one is my favourite so far. This is the first story where I have felt the woman has actually had a brain and taken her own initiative even though she has been put into a bad situation. She is objectified by her father who uses her as a wager in a poker game like she is a possession rather than a human being; the Beast is the same, as in that he calls her a "treasure" and that all he wants to do is to look at her. The heroine hates that she is thought of this way which is why she hates the robotic doll and the Beasts mask because they are both perfect and she doesn't like the fact that they are imitations of humanity they are objects and they remind her that to normal civilization she is one.

I actually feel sorry for the Beast at times because he is so ashamed of what he looks like he goes around covered from head to toe and is misunderstood, and the person he has to talk to is his valet who is an ape. Although what he asks for is unacceptable you can understand why because he would not be able to see a woman any other way. When the heroine rejects his offer and says her own that he can use her like a common prostitute he cries a single tear of shame. So you can see that at heart the Beast is a man of virtues and that he doesn't want her like that he just wants to know what a woman looks like and he takes her rejection personally. Perhaps the Beast thinks that it is due to his nature that she will not show herself to him. This is backed up by the fact that he sheds another tear when he sees the dread she has at disrobing in front of him and if he was just interested in her sexually then he would have taken up her offer for sex.

I was slightly confused by the ending of the story but I believe I understand now. The heroine is beginning to accept herself for what she is and understands that in the Beasts house she is more of an equal than she has ever been due to the fact that women and beast cannot have a soul so on those terms they are alike. She comes to the understanding that the beast has the ability to transform her into something more than what she is now "magus", and at the end he does by licking of her skin to show her fur. Perhaps he is revealing her true nature which is animalistic through an act which can be viewed as intimate. She is in a way claiming her true nature as she has chosen to be reborn a tigress so now she can be nobody's object because she belongs to nature and her own thoughts.
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Puss In Boots confused me the first time I read because it comes from the biased view of the cat himself. For example, where he thinks he is getting praised with all these gifts it is actually people who are throwing things at him in anger of his yowling. It is a story of how Puss helps his master get the girl of his dreams. Carter uses the girl trapped in the tower fairy-tale story line, but this time she is in a house in the middle of the city and the only monster keeping her trapped is her husband and the "old hag", the cat is the trusty steed and his master the knight. Although in this version Puss is the one who has the brains and is the one who comes up with the plan to get the girl.

In the story the woman is objectified and subjugated by many of the other characters. Firstly by the town’s people who do nothing to help her and just seem to accept the way she is being treated. Then by her husband, Signore Panteleon, who keeps her locked away in a room like a possession, only allowing her to look out of the window for one hour a day. The way he describes her, "hide", "flanks", and "bargain" shows that he sees her as subhuman and just a thing to show off his wealth. Then by the master as he at first is content to just looking at her and having sex with her, he doesn't seem to care whether he gets to know her or not at first (he appears to change his tune after he has sex with her the first time though as he wants her forever). And lastly Puss who just comments on her looks and when his master does have sex with her he sort of narrates it like she is an item "target" and he is athlete merely using her, he dehumanises her and he never seems to see a problem in doing that.

Puss is very unreserved about things of sexual nature and he finds it almost amusing that the woman found it slightly embarrassing to be getting undressed in front of man because for him his species all women are naked all the time. He sees sex as a way of claiming and dominating a woman and when he first meets Tabby he treats her as all male cats would, he thinks what he has done as a gift and that Tabby should feel honoured. He thinks in the same way Signore Panteleon's does, he believes that just fingering his wife is honour enough and he need not waste any more energy or time on her. Although, Puss does sort of contradict his own actions by making marriage seem like a choice "your husbands if you want them" so perhaps he actually thinks that sex should be pleasurable on both sides and nothing like the woman's first marriage. I think that perhaps one of the reasons Puss actually agrees to help his master bed the woman he has fallen in love with is so that he would forget about her like his master did with all the other girls and give him all his attention again.

I don't really have much to say about this story because I didn't really enjoy it and I thought it a bit tedious after the stories I had read. The way it was written and the characters didn't really capture my interest like they did in other stories, I thought that whilst it was interesting to do it from the view of the cat as things would be different from their perspectives I didn't really feel any connection to him, perhaps because he was personified enough and the things he was saying I didn't really agree with and some things like the way he greeted Tabby was more disgusting to me than anything else I have read and perhaps this is what Carter wanted us to feel but I just didn't really find the story that interesting to read, maybe in class when we analyse it I will change my mind.
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To understand what fairy tale the Erl-king came from I had to Google it and it turns out that he isn't really in any common fairy tales he is from folklore. He is generally an omen of death and is often referred to as a mischievous sprite. This certainly fits in with Carters description of him as the Heroine is aware that the "Erl-king will do you grievous harm", in fact she even puts it into its own paragraph to make the warning stand out more. Although she gives us a warning she does not heed it herself like in the Bloody chamber when the Heroine there is warned and yet she still goes towards danger, perhaps Carter is trying to show us that women are incapable of resisting danger and corruption, or maybe she is trying to show that woman can handle danger just as well as men can.

In some ways I do believe Carter was to obviously foreshadowing what was about to happen when she says things like "vertical bars of brass-coloured distillation of light" and "darkening opening". She makes it clear right from the start that something is going to happen but when she gets to it she sort of dis-attaches the narrator and goes into third person which I believe leads to a anti-climax of the story, as what happens fells less powerful as you are only a spectator not a participator so the intensity of the murder is lost. Although she does twist the ending to make it different from her other story's, she makes male domination submissive to female domination by killing the Erl-King. This is the only story in which the heroine rejects the idea that she can be happy with man and whilst that might be out of fear of being caged it is still an unusual ending in this collection of short stories.
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Overall I have so far enjoined Carters stories even though I have some of them slightly predictable such as the Bloody Chamber when he leaves the key with her because I mean like she wasn't going to go and have a look. Although I do think that if some of these stories like The Courtship of Mr Lyon where slightly longer then they could have been made better, as there would have been more of a connection built with the characters. I have found that I definitely find the characters with more human traits easier to sympathise with and I have found those stories more interesting to read even if from the outside they are considered an animal (e.g. The Tigers Bride). There is the continuing theme so far that woman are objects and are thought of as subhuman; now some of the attitudes to women (such as Signore Panteleon's attitude to his wife) would be questioned but perhaps in the 1960's this was an acceptable way of thinking. I think it is fair to say that whilst they do have the fairy tale stories lines they are not the ones you would tell a child as I believe that Carter has restored them to their original intent and has is showing all sides of the story's not just the comforting bits.

Wednesday 12 June 2013

Gothic Horror -> Nosferatu 1922

Nosferatu 
The eeriness of the black and white actually added to the film to make it gothic and come across more scary, as did the flickering of the old film, as things often became blurred. At times it was difficult to immediately make out what was going on, due to the lack of clarity in the scenes, which made it come across as more scary, as the fear of the unknown and things that are different are often found scary and induce fear into most people. This is often associated with gothic horror. 
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Black and white have often been used in things for gothic horror to help show the contrast of the pale and dark and to make a clear distinction between the bad and good characters. This is the case in Nosferatu. Count Orlock is dressed in black and all though it is a black and white film you can tell the clothes Hutter wears are of a slightly lighter colour to show that he is meant to be the good character. These obvious clues to what the characters are like often make people side with a character immediately so this will have added an emotional connection between the audience and the character. Emotional bonds are often used in gothic horror to help create tension and fear in places were it is needed. 
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The bad characters, such as Knock and Count Orlock, always had over dramatic make up and clothing to make them stand out. This helped to add horror to the film as they looked disfigured and unnatural, which is a key aspect of Gothic horror. With out the make up and clothing the film wouldn't have been the same as the vampire would have just come across as just a normal person and this would have dulled the audiences reaction to the characters and to the film over all; and the point of any horror is to get a reaction from the audience. 
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The theme of the paranormal has always been seen as scary as its unknown and unexplainable; this film shows the character finding out about the paranormal and being afraid of it. This is a key aspect of Gothic Horror and through the power of facial expressions and body language the film is able to get fear across to the audience without the need for sound effects. And in fact the lack of sound effects sort of emphasises the fear these characters are feeling as the audience is having to work hard to get to them on an emotional level with out sound effects and dialogue, so as the audience is trying to put themselves in the place of the characters and what is happening to them they are getting more immersed into the film and so will feel the emotions the characters are feeling more. So this is adding to the Gothic aspect of the film as fear is playing a major part in film.

What is the difference between Gothic horror and normal horror?

Gothic is the combination of romance and horror. For example you would expect to see haunted houses, vampires, ghosts, castles, frail women, religious aspects etc. in a gothic horror movie.  They predominately consist of the supernatural to create the horror, for example in the film Let Me In.  Whereas horror can be non-supernatural too. For example the movie Scream nothing in there is supernatural it is just shocking and gruesome human behaviour, which is where the horror comes from.

< Gothic horror 


Horror >



The word goth has its roots in the name of a German tribe called the Goths. The term Gothic was later used during medieval times in the field of architecture for the construction of buildings with pointed arches and vaults. A typical Gothic novel has the following elements:
Old, abandoned castle, monastery or an abbey
Extreme scenery such as dense foggy forests, rugged mountains, stormy weather etc.
Omens, curses and visions
Male protagonist generally rescing a damsel in distress
Headstrong villain driven by passion and revenge
Young, beautiful women (often a virgin)
Suspense in the form of shadows, labyrinths etc. 





Thursday 6 June 2013

What is Gothic?

I typed the word Gothic into Google and these are the types of things that came up in the search results.
This picture is an example of Gothic because:
- Its dark and gloomy
- Is a twist on the traditional way a church usually is
- It has Gothic architecture features has such as tall spires, ribbed vaults and flying buttresses
- Its big yet intricate with a lot of detail
- Beautiful yet uninviting
- Cold and intense with a bit of mystery seeing as you cant see into it
- Corruption of religion as it is a church that has been turned into something fairly dark and unpleasant
- The ideas of death that are linked to churches 

 
This picture is an example of Gothic because:
- It is bold and very in your face as its unusual 
- Dark and uninviting, the way they dress doesn't really make you want to go and talk to them 
- Everything is over exaggerated 
- Manipulation of religion,  Christian cross and prayer beads (necklaces) 
 - Contrast of colour - pale face and dark clothing and make up 
- Pushing boundaries and being outside the norm
- Mysterious don't know who she is or what she actually looks like as she has changed what she looks like 
This picture is an example of  Gothic because: 
- It has a sense of sadness and decay as the head stones are collapsing 
- Ideas of death - crows, graveyard, church darkness
- Quite mysterious and gloomy due to the darkness - cant make it all out 
- Contrast of the greenery to the broken gravestones and dark church - out of place
- Cold, uninviting place, quite scary 
This picture is an example of Gothic because:
- Its elegant and feminine yet bulky and bold
- Ideas of death and darkness 
- Twist on old, traditional styles 
- Unique and unusual, stands out 
-  Contrast between the feminine flower oval and the skeleton lady 
- Could perhaps suggest sadness and suffering - skeleton lady