Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2018 at "The Lancet Neurology"
DOI: 10.1016/s1474-4422(18)30082-6
Abstract: Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelley (1797–1851) was the author of Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus. In 1839, she had recurrent, severe headaches whose severity, location, and duration were variable.1 These headaches were associated with dizziness; pain…
read more here.
Keywords:
neurology;
stroke mary;
shelley;
mary shelley ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
2
Published in 2023 at "European Romantic Review"
DOI: 10.1080/10509585.2023.2205141
Abstract: ABSTRACT In the summer of 1826, melting snows revealed a man frozen nearly 200 years, reanimated by a passing doctor. Reports of Roger Dodsworth, formerly deceased, spread from the French papers to launch a flurry…
read more here.
Keywords:
climate changes;
shelley;
roger dodsworth;
roger ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2018 at "IEEE Technology and Society Magazine"
DOI: 10.1109/mts.2018.2880166
Abstract: In 2018, much attention was paid to the 200th anniversary of the publication of one of the most popular novels in the English language, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Her achievement is the more remarkable in that…
read more here.
Keywords:
review frankenstein;
shelley;
mary shelley;
book ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2021 at "Romanticism"
DOI: 10.4324/9780815394266-rom4-1
Abstract: An account of Edmund Burke’s central ideas about the Sublime and the Beautiful shows how the emphasis Burke gave to terror helped to shape the Gothic fiction of Ann Radcliffe and Mary Shelley. Focusing on…
read more here.
Keywords:
shelley;
nature sublime;
world;