In this article I consider Mary Shelley's use of figuration, examining its characteristic forms. In three main sections address her use of allegory, what I call the "infection of the metaphorical", and the groundless metaphor. Shelley's writing will be looked at in dialogic relation to her predecessors and contemporaries and her peculiar stylistics discussed in terms of her sceptical attitude toward, and undermining of Romantic idealism. There will be specific emphasis on her treatment of favourite Romantic projects - nature, writing the self and the perceiving mind. Shelley will be discussed both as revisionist and saboteuse in her attitude to language
For Romantic poets imagination was understood as mainly a bridge to save distances between the world...
Mary Shelley developed and wrote Frankenstein (1818) amidst the rich intellectual and scientific dev...
In recent years, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has often been described as the first science fiction n...
Mary Shelley was propelled into fame while still a teenager because of her powerful and gothic nov...
Present paper is an interdisciplinary approach to Mary Shelley’s works aimed at contributing to Roma...
The aim of this article is to bring to light the educational value of narrative imagination to revea...
The article examines M. Shelley’s «Frankenstein» as an example of the so-called second wave of Engli...
This study focuses upon the letters, journals and selected fiction of Mary Shelley and reveals that ...
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818, 1831) has long been regarded as the foundational text of the scie...
Critics have constantly engaged in the topic of how male Romantic-era writers’ views of language inf...
The article focuses on the problem of the narrator’s and the author’s identity in Mary Shelley’s Fr...
This dissertation seeks to realign and re-evaluate Shelley’s sense of authorship and how this has la...
This paper focuses on Mary Shelley’s letter to her friend Maria Gisborne. In this letter Mary Shelle...
This study explores the formation and evolution of Mary Shelley’s philosophy of sympathy, one which ...
Summary of master thesis on P.B. Shelley and the Spirit of Beauty This thesis consists of three p...
For Romantic poets imagination was understood as mainly a bridge to save distances between the world...
Mary Shelley developed and wrote Frankenstein (1818) amidst the rich intellectual and scientific dev...
In recent years, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has often been described as the first science fiction n...
Mary Shelley was propelled into fame while still a teenager because of her powerful and gothic nov...
Present paper is an interdisciplinary approach to Mary Shelley’s works aimed at contributing to Roma...
The aim of this article is to bring to light the educational value of narrative imagination to revea...
The article examines M. Shelley’s «Frankenstein» as an example of the so-called second wave of Engli...
This study focuses upon the letters, journals and selected fiction of Mary Shelley and reveals that ...
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818, 1831) has long been regarded as the foundational text of the scie...
Critics have constantly engaged in the topic of how male Romantic-era writers’ views of language inf...
The article focuses on the problem of the narrator’s and the author’s identity in Mary Shelley’s Fr...
This dissertation seeks to realign and re-evaluate Shelley’s sense of authorship and how this has la...
This paper focuses on Mary Shelley’s letter to her friend Maria Gisborne. In this letter Mary Shelle...
This study explores the formation and evolution of Mary Shelley’s philosophy of sympathy, one which ...
Summary of master thesis on P.B. Shelley and the Spirit of Beauty This thesis consists of three p...
For Romantic poets imagination was understood as mainly a bridge to save distances between the world...
Mary Shelley developed and wrote Frankenstein (1818) amidst the rich intellectual and scientific dev...
In recent years, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has often been described as the first science fiction n...