Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Erasing
Frankenstein showcases a creative exchange between federally incarcerated
women and members of the prison-education think tank Walls to Bridges
Collective at the Grand Valley Institution for Women (GVI) in Kitchener,
Ontario, and graduate and undergraduate students from the University of New
Brunswick (UNB) in Fredericton, New Brunswick. Working collaboratively by
long-distance mail, the artists and contributors made the first-ever poetic
adaptation of Frankenstein, turning it into a book-length erasure poem. An
erasure poem is an example of "found art," a poem created by piggybacking on
an existing text; the words that are not part of the poem are erased or
blacked out, and what is left is the poem. This book presents the original
erasure poem alongside reflections from participants on the experience.
Synopsis
Who gets to write poetry? Whose voices are made public? Whose voices are heeded? These are the questions at the heart of Erasing Frankenstein: A Public Humanities Prison Arts Project.
This book tells the story of a public humanities project involving federally
incarcerated women and university students in which participants, under the
name of The Erasing Frankenstein Collective, collaboratively created a long
erasure poem using Mary Shelley's Frankenstein as source text.
The project used erasure poetry -- poetry made by blotting out
existing words to create a poem with the words that remain -- to highlight the
systematic silencing of marginalized peoples, a theme that is central to
Frankenstein.
Erasing Frankenstein contains the erasure adaptation (175+
full-colour plates) and essays that contextualize the project in a broader,
interdisciplinary, scholarly context, connecting the project to ongoing
conversations about Frankenstein's cultural legacy, its social justice themes,
public scholarship, and the public domain. The book also includes an annotated
list of erasure poetry to inspire future work.
This book is aimed at a diverse audience from arts and
humanities scholars and teachers interested in Frankenstein and its
adaptations, to scholar-practitioners engaged in prison arts and education,
outreach activities, and forms of public scholarship