Matilda (novella)
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Mary Shelley wrote the short novel "Mathilda" in 1819, but it was not published until 1959. It was initially entitled "Fields of Fancy", a story about father-daughter incest, where a female character begins to tell her story of misery to Diotima, and in the midst of that story, the story of Mathilda is told. Shelley created her novel as a story of misery within another story of misery, however, in the end she chose to remove this framework, thus emphasizing the incestuous nature of the sufferings.
In "Writing and Re-writing Incest in Mary Shelley's Mathilda." Keats-Shelley Journal 45 (1996) Margaret Davenport Garrets comments on the novella, that Mathilda could be seen as a rewriting of the ancient incest myth, and that Mary Shelley thus speaks of the problem of love between a woman and a man, when it takes place in a cultural environment where the woman thinks of herself as morally inferior being and knowing that society expects her to be protected by a male- be it father, brother or husband. Thus the story can be seen as a metaphor for what happens when a woman, ignorant of all consequences, follows her own heart while being dependent on her male benefactor.[1]
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Garrets, Margaret Davenport (1996). "Writing and Re-writing Incest in Mary Shelley's Mathilda". Keats-Shelley Journal 45.
[edit] References
- Shelley, Mary (1959). Mathilda, June 1994 Edition, Buccaneer Books. ISBN 1568493355.
LC Classification: PZ3.S545 Mat PR5397