Isabela Freire's profile

Frankenstein: A story without words

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
One day workshop by Stephen Barrett & Andrew Osman in the University of East London in 2013 regarding the narrative potential of the structure of a book/booklet. The object of this project was to select one of 10 simple stories, use stock imagery (from newspapers, magazines) and graphic techniques to tell this story without words. That was mine:
 
 
Frankenstein
Henry Frankenstein is a brilliant scientist who has been conducting experiments on the re-animation of lifeless bodies. He has conducted experiments on small animals and is now ready to create life in a man he has assembled from body parts he has been collecting from various sites such as graveyards or the gallows. His fiancée Elizabeth and friend Victor Moritz are worried about his health as he spends far too many hours in his laboratory on his experiments. He’s successful and the creature he’s made come to life is gentle but clearly afraid of fire. Henry’s father, Baron Frankenstein, bring his son to his senses and Henry agrees that the monster should be humanely destroyed. Before they can do so however, the monster escapes and in its innocence, kills a little girl. The villagers rise up intent on destroying the murdering creature.
The scientist.
The birth of the monster.
The run loose and its consequences.
The people in rage.


Thank you!
 
Frankenstein: A story without words
Published:

Frankenstein: A story without words

A fanzine telling the story of Frankenstein with only images.

Published:

Creative Fields