Camille
Paglia's review of The Man Who Wrote
Frankenstein is from her
column in Salon.com of 14 March 2007. The
full column can be read at:
<http://salon.com/opinion/paglia/2007/03/14/coulter/>.
Barack
Obama commands respect while Hillary Clinton overacts. Plus: John
Edwards' disappearing act, Mary Shelley debunked, and Ann Coulter's
gender weirdness
By
Camille Paglia
[...]
Finally,
I read a fabulous book last week — John Lauritsen's “The
Man Who Wrote Frankenstein,” which will be published in May by
the gay-themed Pagan Press, based in Dorchester, Mass. Lauritsen, who
is known for his work in gay history and for his heterodox views of
the AIDS epidemic, sent me an advance copy, which arrived as I was on
my way to midterm exams. Its thesis is that the poet Percy Bysshe
Shelley, and not his wife, the feminist idol, Mary Shelley, wrote
“Frankenstein” and that the hidden theme of that book is
male love.
As
I sat there reading while proctoring exams, I tried unsuccessfully to
stifle my chortles and guffaws of admiring laughter — which
were definitely distracting the students in the first rows.
Lauritsen's book is important not only for its audacious theme but
for the devastating portrait it draws of the insularity and turgidity
of the current academy. As an independent scholar, Lauritsen is
beholden to no one. As a consequence, he can fight openly with myopic
professors and, without fear of retribution, condemn them for their
inability to read and reason.
This
book, which is a hybrid of mystery story, polemic and paean to poetic
beauty, shows just how boring literary criticism has become over the
past 40 years. I haven't been this exhilarated by a book about
literature since I devoured Leslie Fiedler's iconoclastic essays in
college back in the 1960s. All that crappy poststructuralism that
poured out of universities for so long pretended to challenge power
but was itself just the time-serving piety of a status-conscious new
establishment. Lauritsen's book shows what true sedition and
transgression are all about.
Lauritsen
assembles an overwhelming case that Mary Shelley, as a badly educated
teenager, could not possibly have written the soaring prose of
“Frankenstein” (which has her husband's intensity of tone
and headlong cadences all over it) and that the so-called manuscript
in her hand is simply one example of the clerical work she did for
many writers as a copyist. I was stunned to learn about the
destruction of records undertaken by Mary for years after Percy's
death in 1822 in a boating accident in Italy. Crucial pages covering
the weeks when “Frankenstein” was composed were ripped
out of a journal. And Percy Shelley's identity as the author seems to
have been known in British literary circles, as illustrated by a
Knights Quarterly review published in 1824 that Lauritsen reprints in
the appendix.
The
stupidity and invested self-interest of prominent literary scholars
are lavishly on display here in exchanges reproduced from a
Romanticism listserv or in dueling letters to the editor, which
Lauritsen forcefully contradicts in acerbic footnotes. This is a
funny, wonderful, revelatory book that I hope will inspire ambitious
graduate students and young faculty to strike blows for truth in our
mired profession, paralyzed by convention and fear.
# # #
About
the writer
Camille
Paglia is the University Professor of Humanities and Media Studies at
the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Her most recent book is
“Break, Blow, Burn: Camille Paglia Reads Forty-Three of the
World's Best Poems.”