The Man Who Wrote Frankenstein
By John Lauritsen
Reviewed by Ian Young
Even before publication, gay historian John
Lauritsen's The
Man Who Wrote Frankenstein
had already ruffled some feathers in the academic aviary. The cause of
all the fuss is Lauritsen's contention that Percy Shelley, one of
England's greatest poets, wrote the anonymous horror classic
traditionally attributed to the teenage girl he left his wife for
— and that “male love is the dominant theme” of Frankenstein!
Reviewing the thesis of Shelley scholar Phyllis
Zimmerman's 1998 book Shelley's Fiction,
Lauritsen champions her persuasive case that Percy Shelley, not his
uneducated, rather silly second wife Mary, was the true author of the
eloquent narrative about a scientist's creation of crypto-human life.
Lauritsen's argument for the importance of the “male
love” theme in Frankenstein
is less convincing, but he does demonstrate that throughout that
complex story there are tentative, sometimes coded, sometimes confused,
approaches to the Abominable and Unmentionable Crime. Shelley, who
translated into beautiful English Plato's notorious account of a gay
banquet, was intrigued by homoeroticism, his interest encouraged and
stimulated by his close friendship with mad, bad, dangerous-to-know
Lord Byron, who seduced women and fell in love with boys.
It seems only too plausible that into the terrible
text of the monster thriller he was writing while hanging out with
Byron, the rebellious Shelley inserted some of the first inchoate
murmurs of what, over half a century later, would become the homosexual
voice.
Traditional and feminist scholars, especially those
who believe that Frankenstein
is about “a man trying to have a baby without a woman” will
be scandalized by Lauritsen's revisionist study. But anyone who loves
the greatest monster story of them all will find The Man Who Wrote
Frankenstein engaging — and intriguing. (Pagan Press,
paperback, 232 pages, $16.95)
*
* *
Torso —
September 2007
Return to Booklist.