The Volcano That Spawned a Monster: Frankenstein and Climate Change

IF 0.4 3区 社会学 Q4 MATERIALS SCIENCE, CHARACTERIZATION & TESTING
G. D. Wood
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

abstract:The volcanic period of 1816–18 is the most recent and vivid case study we have for worldwide climate catastrophe, evident from archival and geological records of sustained extreme weather, including drought, floods, storms, and crop-killing temperature decline. The signature literary expression of this historic climate crisis occurred in Switzerland, where teenage Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein in the midst of the disastrous “Year without a Summer,” 1816, a season of floods and food riots caused by the eruption of Mount Tambora thousands of miles away. This essay, combining climate science with historical and literary sources, reexamines the literary legend of that direful, stormy summer, which Mary Shelley spent on the shores of Lake Geneva with the poets Percy Shelley and Lord Byron, with a new and original emphasis on its climatic context. The writers huddled indoors and wrote ghost stories, while the cataclysmic weather and humanitarian emergency unfolding around them weaved its way into Mary Shelley’s imagining of a tragic monster brought to life.
火山产生了怪物:弗兰肯斯坦和气候变化
1816 - 1818年的火山时期是我们对全球气候灾难的最新和生动的案例研究,从持续的极端天气的档案和地质记录中可以看出,包括干旱、洪水、风暴和导致作物死亡的温度下降。这一历史性气候危机的标志性文学表达发生在瑞士,少年玛丽·雪莱(Mary Shelley)在灾难性的“无夏之年”1816年写下了《弗兰肯斯坦》(Frankenstein)。那一年,数千英里外的坦博拉火山爆发引发了洪水和粮食骚乱。这篇文章将气候科学与历史和文学资料结合起来,重新审视了玛丽·雪莱与诗人珀西·雪莱和拜伦勋爵在日内瓦湖畔度过的那个可怕的、暴风雨般的夏天的文学传说,并以一种新的、原始的方式强调了它的气候背景。作家们蜷缩在室内写鬼故事,而他们周围的灾难性天气和人道主义紧急情况交织在一起,融入了玛丽·雪莱(Mary Shelley)对一个悲剧怪物的想象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
HUNTINGTON LIBRARY QUARTERLY
HUNTINGTON LIBRARY QUARTERLY HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.40
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