A NEW BBC Alba documentary explores how the roots of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein – and its monster – can be traced to Scotland.
Sar-sgeoil: Frankenstein, produced by Caledonia TV for BBC Alba’s literary series, explores the origins of Shelley’s iconic book.
First published anonymously in 1818, Frankenstein is believed to have been heavily influenced by Shelley’s time in Dundee and includes a journey to Orkney.
While the connection to the Northern Isles is undeniable, as Victor Frankenstein creates a new monster on a remote, isolated island in an attempt to right the wrongs of his first creature; the ties to the City of Discovery are more cryptic.
Broadcaster Cathy MacDonald travels to Dundee to meet local experts and fans of Shelley’s finest work – believed to be one of the earliest examples of science fiction, written at a time when science was advancing at a rapid rate.
In Dundee, MacDonald finds tales from the Tay – the river the city is set on and where the young Shelley spent some of her formative years living with one of Dundee’s wealthy 19th century barons, the Baxter family.
It was mused that Shelley (above), born into an academic and influential family to mother Mary Wollstonecraft and father William Godwin, went to Dundee for reasons of education and health. However, it is also suggested a teenage Shelley, whose mother died shortly after childbirth, was sent north from London to put distance between her and love interest, poet Percy Shelley, whom she would later marry.
The Dundee of the early 1800s, that Shelley observed, was a growing industrial settlement.
In the introduction to the 1831 edition, Shelley wrote: “I lived principally in the country as a girl, and passed a considerable time in Scotland.
“I made occasional visits to the more picturesque parts; but my habitual residence was on the blank and dreary northern shores of the Tay near Dundee.
“It was beneath the trees of the grounds belonging to our house or on the bleak sides of the woodless mountains near that my true compositions, the airy flights of my imagination were born and fostered.”
Jute barons the Baxter family were at the forefront of this, but whaling and the city’s docks, too, played a huge role in the local economy and life in Dundee at the time.
It is even suggested Shelley, who is believed to have lived in a house near what is now Dundee’s South Baffin Street, took her inspiration from the whalers and the ships coming back into port.
Speaking to MacDonald, Dr Daniel Cook of the University of Dundee, set the scene at the time, including The Cottage where Shelley lived with William Baxter and his family.
“The cottage, unfortunately, no longer stands. It was demolished in the 1890s, in the spirit of progress, and is now the site of tenement buildings.
“It might’ve been named that with classic Dundee humour, a kind of ironic nickname and it would’ve been in the grounds of an acre.
“I think she would’ve been very comfortable there.”
Sar-sgeoil: Frankenstein airs on BBC Alba on Thursday 9 June at 9pm.
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