Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Gender Studies
Reference26 articles.
1. UllmanRamsey High Conquest: The Story of Mountaineering J. B. LippincottPhiladelphia194118
2. EngelClaireEliane Mountaineering in the Alps: An Historical Survey George Allen & UnwinLondon197117
3. See Fred V. Randel, “Frankenstein, Feminism, and the Intertextuality of Mountains”, Studies in Romanticism, Winter (1984), pp. 515–531,for a different view of Romanticism's influence on the novel's Alpine material. Randel argues that “Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley were turning the literary conventions – especially, in the summer of 1816 in Geneva, the mountain-images – of Milton, Coleridge and Wordsworth into weapons of rivalry and debate; and Mary Shelley aspired to join this debate” (p. 517). He then offers an elaborate analysis of the way Mary uses those contested conventions to structure her Alpine scenes. Here I approach this material in terms of a fairly simple tension between a generally Romantic appreciation of the mountains and a more specifically scientific desire to extract their secrets, rather than in terms of a debate within Romanticism itself.
4. Ullman, pp. 20–21.
5. StylesShowell On Top of the World: An Illustrated History of Mountaineering and Mountaineers MacmillanNew York196715
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