Whether loyal to the original plot, or divergent to the point of parody, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein; or the Modern Prometheus is a persistent cultural organism. I argue that the continued popularity of Shelley's Creature as source material in popular culture is due to the narrative's suitability as a shorthand for liminality in Anglo-American material cultures: dark creation narratives, monstrosity, fabrication and bricolage, as well as the implications of isolation on the human psyche. I call this phenomenon the Frankenstein meme, building on the meme theories of Richard Dawkins, Susan Blackmore, and Aaron Lynch. This chapter traces the course of Shelley's original narrative through a sample of popular culture, noting the direct impact of Frankenstein's crucial components, and examines the fitness of Frankenstein as a meme.
CITATION STYLE
Rollins, S. (2018). The Frankenstein Meme: The Memetic Prominence of Mary Shelley’s Creature in Anglo-American Visual and Material Cultures (pp. 247–263). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78142-6_14
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