Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic Monster

The contamination of life with plastic pollution and humanity’s lethargic response to the problem is an unfolding terror: a story of Gothic horror unfolding in contemporary times. The power of Mary Shelley’s Gothic novel Frankenstein looms over the current terror of plastic pollution to encourage ch...

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Main Author: Robyn Glade-Wright
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: James Cook University 2019-10-01
Series:eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3707/pdf
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author Robyn Glade-Wright
author_facet Robyn Glade-Wright
author_sort Robyn Glade-Wright
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description The contamination of life with plastic pollution and humanity’s lethargic response to the problem is an unfolding terror: a story of Gothic horror unfolding in contemporary times. The power of Mary Shelley’s Gothic novel Frankenstein looms over the current terror of plastic pollution to encourage changes to the materials we create, use and discard. In Frankenstein, a monster was spawned in a process that desecrates the act of creating new life. Similarly, in my work of art Microplastics Found in Human Embryo, the depiction of an embryo is desecrated by plastic contamination. Frankenstein was unable to control his monster, and, denied empathy and love, the monster killed Frankenstein’s loved ones and haunted its creator’s soul. As microplastics are largely unseen, and increasing exponentially, they are becoming a modern monster. Microplastics can cross the placenta and the blood brain barrier, endangering the life and health of our children, potentially robbing us of progeny, and the future of humankind. Over the past two hundred years, Frankenstein has functioned as a shadowy mnemonic tale, haunting scientists and technologists by reminding them to consider the impacts of their creations. Shelley’s message, if applied to the current dangers of the “Age of Plastic”, might help us to clean up plastic pollution and embrace sustainable materials. In this spirit, Microplastics Found in Human Embryo reveals a monstrous idea, which aims to help awaken us from complacency and convince humanity to form a relationship which sustains all forms of life on Earth.
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spelling doaj.art-7ebf39cd3da54fb49a5445ab7b0b33202022-12-22T00:21:40ZengJames Cook UniversityeTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics1448-29402019-10-0118210.25120/etropic.18.2.2019.3707Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic MonsterRobyn Glade-Wright0James Cook University, AustraliaThe contamination of life with plastic pollution and humanity’s lethargic response to the problem is an unfolding terror: a story of Gothic horror unfolding in contemporary times. The power of Mary Shelley’s Gothic novel Frankenstein looms over the current terror of plastic pollution to encourage changes to the materials we create, use and discard. In Frankenstein, a monster was spawned in a process that desecrates the act of creating new life. Similarly, in my work of art Microplastics Found in Human Embryo, the depiction of an embryo is desecrated by plastic contamination. Frankenstein was unable to control his monster, and, denied empathy and love, the monster killed Frankenstein’s loved ones and haunted its creator’s soul. As microplastics are largely unseen, and increasing exponentially, they are becoming a modern monster. Microplastics can cross the placenta and the blood brain barrier, endangering the life and health of our children, potentially robbing us of progeny, and the future of humankind. Over the past two hundred years, Frankenstein has functioned as a shadowy mnemonic tale, haunting scientists and technologists by reminding them to consider the impacts of their creations. Shelley’s message, if applied to the current dangers of the “Age of Plastic”, might help us to clean up plastic pollution and embrace sustainable materials. In this spirit, Microplastics Found in Human Embryo reveals a monstrous idea, which aims to help awaken us from complacency and convince humanity to form a relationship which sustains all forms of life on Earth.https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3707/pdfplasticpollutionenvironmentartfrankensteinhorrormonstergothic
spellingShingle Robyn Glade-Wright
Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic Monster
eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
plastic
pollution
environment
art
frankenstein
horror
monster
gothic
title Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic Monster
title_full Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic Monster
title_fullStr Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic Monster
title_full_unstemmed Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic Monster
title_short Plastic Gothic: Frankenstein, Art and the Microplastic Monster
title_sort plastic gothic frankenstein art and the microplastic monster
topic plastic
pollution
environment
art
frankenstein
horror
monster
gothic
url https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3707/pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT robyngladewright plasticgothicfrankensteinartandthemicroplasticmonster