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The Metamorphosis of the Myth of Alchemy: Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
Author(s) -
Asunción LópezVarela Azcárate,
Estefanía Saavedra
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
la revista icono 14
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1697-8293
DOI - 10.7195/ri14.v15i1.1036
Subject(s) - alchemy , consilience , mythology , posthumanism , humanism , philosophy , context (archaeology) , romanticism , poetry , epistemology , literature , romance , art history , art , history , theology , archaeology
This article takes as starting point the myth of alchemy in Mary Shelley´s Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus, often interpreted as a warning of the risks and dangers of science and technology demonized in the form of the creature. Set in the Romantic period, the paper argues that the novel stages an ambiguous relationship between the advances in natural science and the philosophical and spiritual concerns that Mary Shelley inherited from her father, the philosopher William Godwin, which she discussed with her husband, the poet Percy B. Shelley. In the context of contemporary interdisciplinary discourses that contemplate ‘consilience’ between the humanities and the sciences, this paper offers a reading of Frankenstein and of Percy B. Shelley’s essay “A Defence of Poetry” as critical of empirical science in their ambiguous positioning with regards to alchemy and contemporary science. Furthermore, the research seeks to establish links with eco-cybernetic theories which bring to the fore a renewed interest on humanistic aspects.

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