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The Rain Is Gone Frankenstein

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The most notable writing technique that Mary Shelley uses in the book Frankenstein is that of the weather. Throughout the majority of the key parts of Frankenstein's life in volume one, he recollects on the weather. This something I noticed in Shelley's writing from chapter one. Shelley uses the weather to not only set a scene in the reader's mind, but to show how drastic events can form memories about the littlest detail. Where the events of Frankenstein's life are not as notable, the weather is not as detailed. This is seen where Frankenstein is not as connected to the world because he is sick from depression and mental illness. Shelley uses the weather to connect these events to one another from the view of importance in Frankenstein's mind.

  1. Frankenstein The Rain Is Gone Sample
  2. The Rain Is Gone Frankenstein Cast

The first time I realized something important was being foreshadowed was in chapter one when Frankenstein is stuck inside on a family vacation because 'the inclemency of the weather (Shelley, 22)'. At this point Frankenstein falls upon a book that makes him wish to connect to science on a deeper level. This was noted as an important part of Frankenstein's life because it opened his mind to the idea of a different kind of philosophical science, which leads him to creating a monster which had been thought never to be made before. The summer that the creation of the monster is occurring is the next time the weather is described. 'It was a most beautiful season; never did the fields bestow a more plentiful harvest, or the vines yield a more luxuriant vintage: but my eyes were insensible to the charms of nature (Shelley, 37).' Though Frankenstein was absorbed in his creating of the monster, he was still able to recall how beautiful a summer it was. This shows that something important was indeed occurring. The little detail that Shelley uses makes the reader understand how big of a moment the time is within the story. This is seen more drastically when Shelley describes a single night, instead of just a day. The day that Frankenstein's monster comes alive adds a dark and scary tone to the picture in the reader's mind, 'It was a dreary night in November (Shelley, 38)'. Through the use of weather and description Shelley made me shiver as I read of Frankenstein running through the night away from his creation. If the weather had been sunny and warm the effect Shelley was trying to make the reader obtain would not have occurred.

Significance of Weather on Victor Frankenstein 'I remained, while the storm lasted, watching its progress with curiosity and delight.' Pg.38 'The storm appeared to approach rapidly;' and 'it advanced: the heavens were clouded, and I soon felt the rain coming down slowly in. The fourth Frankenstein film by Hammer, it's easily the best film I've yet seen from that studio, and that's because its narrative is an intelligent and novel reworking of the misogynistic male fantasy of mother-less birth inherent in Shelley's story.

The last true description of the weather Shelley writes is before the monster's tale. It is as though she wanted us to understand how important the events leading up to the monster's side of the story are. Though the monster does describe rain and sun, he does not use the weather to grasp the emotion of the reader as that of Frankenstein. I think that the lack of description upon the weather after this point helped to portray a well thought shift in the story. After this point Frankenstein himself is too obsessed with figuring out how to stop the monster from hurting the ones he loves to notice the little detail. This, to me, shows that the great parts of Frankenstein's life are over, and only the sad, blurry parts remain. This is the effect that Shelley has on me just through her use of the weather.

By: Sophia Price, Litqueen1

Citation

Shelley, Mary. 'Frankenstein, 1818 text'. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008. Print.

Birth nameFrank Fallico
OriginGreater Toronto Area, Canada
GenresRap music
Occupation(s)Rapper and record producer
LabelsKnowledge of Self
Associated actsChoclair, Maestro Fresh Wes, Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz

Boom 3d 1.3 3 download. Frankenstein is the stage name of Frank Fallico, a former Canadian rapper and record producer.[1] He is most noted as a two-time Juno Award nominee for Rap Recording of the Year, receiving nods at the Juno Awards of 1998 for his single 'The Rain Is Gone'[2] and at the Juno Awards of 1999 for his album Frankenstein UV.[3]

Forming his own independent Knowledge of Self label in the mid-1990s,[1] he released a number of singles, including 'Frankenstein's Pain', 'What Does It All Mean' and 'The Rain Is Gone', before releasing UV in 1997.[4]

Fallico also produced material for other artists, including 'Situation 9' on Choclair's album Ice Cold, 'When I Rhyme' on Maestro Fresh Wes's album Ever Since,[5] and a remix of Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz's 'Deja Vu (Uptown Baby)'.[1] Under the stage name Frankie Ano, he also collaborated with Bahamadia on the song 'Droppin' Gems' for the Drop the Beat television soundtrack.[6]

With Day, Choclair's business partner in Knee Deep Entertainment, he was also co-host of an internet radio show devoted to Canadian hip hop.[1]

He has since left the music business, and is currently a real estate agent in the Greater Toronto Area.

Much of his recorded material was reissued by Ill Adrenaline Records in 2014 as the compilation album The Science of Sound.[7]

The Rain Is Gone Frankenstein
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References[edit]

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References[edit]

Frankenstein The Rain Is Gone Sample

  1. ^ abcd'Hip-Hop in Canada Gains Recognition'. Billboard, April 4, 1998.
  2. ^'Our Lady Peace leads Juno nominations'. Halifax Daily News, February 12, 1998.
  3. ^'Dion leads Juno nominees: Ladies and Twain also up for awards'. The Globe and Mail, January 28, 1999.
  4. ^Steven Green and Karen Richardson, T Dot Griots: An Anthology of Toronto's Black Storytellers. Trafford Publishing, 2004. ISBN9781553956310. p. 52.
  5. ^'Maestro working on some new rap tricks: Frankenstein suggests toning down volume on his raps'. Edmonton Journal, January 24, 2001.
  6. ^'Drop the Beat becomes a CD: Canada's first hip hop TV show releases soundtrack'. National Post, March 7, 2000.
  7. ^Matt Jost, 'Frankenstein :: The Science of Sound :: Ill Adrenaline'. Rap Reviews, July 22, 2014.

The Rain Is Gone Frankenstein Cast

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