Introduction
For the second year in a row all incoming Cornell freshmen and transfer students will be asked to read the same book, to provide a shared experience of reading, thinking and talking about a challenging text. Last year it was Jared Diamond's Pulitzer Prize-winning Guns, Germs and Steel. This year it's Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: the Modern Prometheus. The classic novel is not only the source of a cultural icon but raises important questions about the place of science in the modern world. This year, faculty, staff and members of the Ithaca community are also being urged to read the book and join in discussions.

News Releases
Freshman
book project spurs Frankenstein fever
Forget the flat-topped, rheumy-eyed giant with the zombie shuffle and the rigor-mortis grin. That's kid stuff. This is the real thing: Frankenstein, the book, written by an 18-year-old Englishwoman named Mary Shelley. And Cornell University and the entire Ithaca community are in on it. More than 3,500 new students at Cornell, as well as many faculty, staff and continuing students, are delving into Mary Shelley's Gothic horror story in preparation for what promises to be a compelling academic rite of passage. Monster panels, talks, seminars and sermons, monster book groups, monster plays, movies and maybe even a monster ball have all spun out of Cornell's First Year Book Project, overseen by Provost Biddy Martin and Isaac Kramnick, vice provost for undergraduate education, and sponsored by the Provost's Office.
Mary
Shelley's 'Frankenstein' selected as book all incoming Cornell freshmen
will read this summer.
A world-famous novel written two centuries ago by an 18-year-old Englishwoman will be required reading for all Cornell University incoming freshman and undergraduate transfer students in fall 2002. Students will be given free copies of the book this summer and will engage in faculty-led small-group discussions about it during their first weeks on campus, at Orientation and in most freshman writing seminars. Members of the Cornell community are also urged to read the book.
Calendar of
Events
(dates and times
subject to change)
August 2002
25 - Large group symposium: 3:30pm - 5:30pm in
Barton Hall
on campus
30 - Film: Frankenstein (Frankenstein
Fridays at Cornell Cinema)
September
2002
2 - Film: Frankenstein
6, 9, 12 - Film: The Bride of Frankenstein
13, 16 - Film: Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man
18 - Monster
Talk: "Bringing Up Monsters: Frankenstein and Education"
20, 23 - Film: House of Frankenstein
24 - Film: Monstershow
27, 30 - Film: Abbott
& Costello Meet Frankenstein (shown with
the short Frankenstein Cries Out!)
30 - Frankenstein
-- Penetrating the Secrets of Nature exhibit opens at the Tompkins County
Public Library
October
2002
4 - Film: Gods & Monsters
7 - Monster Mondays begin at the Tompkins County Public
Library
9 - Monster
Talk: "Mutants, Hopeful Monsters, Chimeras and Frankenfoods"
10 - Film: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
15 - Monster Comics discussion at the Tompkins County Public
Library
18 - Film: Metropolis
23 - Jumping Genes virtual exhibit on display at the Tompkins
County Public Library
24 - Community Reading at the Tompkins County Public Library
25 - Film: The Revenge of Frankenstein
30 - Monster Talk: "Monsters in American Popular Culture"
31 - Film: special Halloween screening of Frankenstein
November
2002
1 - Film: The Golem
7 - Community Forum at the Tompkins County Public Library
with Cornell's winning RoboCup team.
8 - Film: The Spirit of the Beehive
15 - Film: Young Frankenstein
20 - Monster Talk: "27 Lives of the Lizard King: Technology,
Geopolitics and Godzilla"
22 - Film: Robocop
TBA - Film: The Rocky Horror Picture Show
December
2002
TBA - Film: The Rocky Horror Picture Show
13 - Film: Frankenstein Unbound
13 - Film: The Iron Giant
TBA - Film: Edward Scissorhands
Links
Learn how Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein was chosen as this year's New Student Reading Project book.
The New Student Reading Project,
past and present.
See a video lecture series by Provost Biddy Martin and Vice Provost Isaac
Kramnick about Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (you will need
Quicktime to view these movies)
Section 1 - Why a book project, and why Frankenstein? (5:04)
| 200k | 100k | 56k | Audio only |
Section 2 - What happens after you arrive at Cornell? (5:54)
| 200k | 100k | 56k | Audio only |
Section 3 - Themes in Frankenstein (21:47)
| 200k | 100k | 56k | Audio only |
The National
Library of Medicine Frankenstein exhibit
History of the novel, film and stage versions, and a chapter by chapter commentary, with a discussion of the impact on popular views of science.
Tompkins County Public Library Frankenstein
web site
A description of the community's participation in the Frankenstein reading project, and the American Library Association's traveling Frankenstein exhibit.
Frankenstein
Fridays
All Fall Semester
In conjunction with the New Student Book project, the reading of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, and the Tompkins County Public Library's fall exhibit, Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature (October 2 - November 17), as well as this summer's community-wide read of the book, Cornell Cinema is pleased to present the semester-long series, Frankenstein Fridays, screenings which will be offered for just $4 to campus and community members alike. Beginning with the early James Whale masterpieces Frankenstein and The Bride of Frankenstein, the series will also include the increasingly campy Universal Studio updates, three antecedents to Whale's 1931 classic (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The Golem and Metropolis), and several of the many take-offs on the original, including Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein and the quintessential midnight movie The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
Large
Group Symposium
(3:30pm - 5:30pm on Aug. 25th, 2002)
Moderator: Provost Biddy Martin, professor of German studies and women's studies.
Panelists and their topics:
Stephen Hilgartner, associate professor of science and technology studies,
"The Crowd on the Slope: Frankenstein and Contemporary Bio-ethical Issues"
Molly Hite, professor of English, "Love Your Monster"
Vice Provost Isaac Kramnick, the Richard J. Schwartz Professor of Government,
"The Enlightenment: Progress and Science"
Larry Palmer, professor of law, "Justice: The Monster and Victor Frankenstein"
Robert Richardson, vice provost for research and the Floyd R. Newman Professor
of Physics, "A Frankenstein Experiment"
Monster Talks
Wednesday evenings, 8:30-9:30 p.m., in the Robert Purcell Community Center auditorium, on campus, on the following dates:
Sept. 18: James Adams, associate professor of English, "Bringing Up Monsters: Frankenstein and Education"
Oct. 9: Jeffrey Doyle, the Hays and James Clark Director of the Office of Undergraduate Biology and professor of plant biology, "Mutants, Hopeful Monsters, Chimeras and Frankenfoods"
Oct. 30: Glenn Altschuler, dean of the School of Continuing Education and Summer Sessions and the Litwin Professor of American Studies, "Monsters in American Popular Culture"
Nov. 20: Brett de Bary, director of the Visual Studies Program and professor of Asian studies, "27 Lives of the Lizard King: Technology, Geopolitics and Godzilla"
Community
events held at the Tompkins County
Public Library
For a complete guide to Frankenstein activities in the area, visit the Ithaca library's web site at http://tcpl.org/Frankenstein/.
Frankenstein -- Penetrating the Secrets of Nature: The traveling
exhibit of the ALA at the Tompkins County Public Library opens Sept. 30. An
opening reception and tour of the exhibition will be held the week of Oct.
7, TBA. The reception includes a talk by David A. Kirby, a visiting scholar
in Cornell's Department of Science and Technology Studies. Susan E. Lederer,
medical historian at Yale University School of Medicine, curator of the national
exhibit, will lead the tour.
Monster Mondays: Theme programs for kids 7 and older each
Monday at 4 p.m. Oct. 7 through Nov. 24.
Monster Comics: The Comic Book Club of Ithaca discusses Frankenstein
and the Funnies Tuesday, Oct. 15, 7 p.m.
Virtual Science: On Wednesday, Oct. 23, at 7 p.m., teenagers
from area schools converge at the Tompkins County Library and log onto the
Fingerlakes Library System's traveling computer lab. The online world, SciCenter,
is hosted by the Cornell Theory Center (CTC) and features an exhibit on Jumping
Genes, a naturally occurring form of genetic mutation more formally known
as transposable elements. Technically, the students will walk, run and fly
around the virtual world, exploring content and interacting with museum exhibits
developed by Cornell undergraduates and high school students under the direction
of Margaret Corbit, outreach and public relations manager at CTC.
Community Reading: On Oct. 24 at 7 p.m., the Community Library
Reading Group will discuss Shelley's Frankenstein.
Community Forum: A community forum on artificial intelligence,
hosted by Gary Stewart, Cornell assistant director of community relations,
will be held Thursday, Nov. 7, at 7 p.m. and includes the Cornell RoboCup
Soccer Team, Big Red. The Cornell team beat the Freie Universität (FU)
Fighters of Berlin, 7-3, at the 2002 RoboCup small-size robot soccer league
championship in Fukuoka, Japan this summer.
Return to the calendar of events
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