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In this podcast, Jack and Thomas discuss the concept of creation in several novels they have read. They compare the creation stories in Brady's Sweetgrass and the Jewish Study Bible, exploring the different cultural and religious beliefs. They also analyze the different versions of creation in Frankenstein 1818 text and Frankenstein Baghdad, focusing on the creation of living beings and the relationships between creators and monsters. They aim to identify similarities and differences between these novels and the previous ones mentioned. What's up guys, welcome back to our podcast, I'm Jack Caravan, and I'm your host Thomas Wallach. We say welcome back, but there was no first podcast, and we're not going to say welcome back again because I don't foresee another podcast coming after this one. But welcome to the FSEM Conversations Final Project. Jack and I are doing a podcast in which we plan on exploring the idea of creation in several novels we've read this semester, including Brady's Sweetgrass, Jewish Study Bible, Frankenstein and Baghdad. So creation represents a variety of different things in these novels. In Brady's Sweetgrass and the Jewish Study Bible, creation revolves around the creation of the world through lenses of different cultures and religions that possess their own unique beliefs and stories. And we plan on doing this by juxtaposing the similarities and differences between each of these creation stories and trying to identify the aspects that we specifically thought are intriguing or we kind of can relate to other creation stories. But for Frankenstein 1818 text and Frankenstein Baghdad, we plan to explore the different versions of what creation means and how both texts evaluate the creation of a living being in the aftermath of such creations. We plan again to juxtapose these texts and find similarities and differences between the creation of monsters through relationship with creators and how the version of creation differs from the creation in the previously mentioned two novels.