Mary Shelley’s lifelong fascination with animation, identity, and the boundaries between life and death.
The spark of life was only the beginning. While popular culture remembers the lightning flash and the stitched-together creature, Frankenstein remains one of the most searching meditations on science, loneliness, and what it means to be human. Remarkably, Mary Shelley was still a teenager when she wrote it.
From the icy wastes of the Arctic in Frankenstein to the uncanny resurrections and transformations of her shorter fiction, this online event celebrates the enduring imagination of the so-called “Mother of Science Fiction.” Professor Sharon Ruston explores the story of Frankenstein’s creature alongside Mary Shelley’s lesser-known tales.
She shows how stories such as On Ghosts, Roger Dodsworth: The Reanimated Englishman, Valerius: The Reanimated Roman, and Transformation continue to reveal Shelley’s lifelong fascination with animation, identity, and the boundaries between life and death.
Part of Short Stories – The Gothic Season

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Visitor information
Address
84 Plymouth Grove, Manchester, Greater Manchester, M13 9LW
0161 273 2215
Opening times
Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday, 11am-4.30pm (last entry 3pm)











