Stitching Together Creativity and Responsibility

This article explores Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein as an “object of care” for use in examining the relationship between creativity and responsibility in the sciences and beyond. Through three short sketches from different disciplinary lenses—literature, science and technology studies, and feminist studies—readers get a sense of the different ways scholars might consider Shelley’s text as an object of care. Through an analysis and synthesis of these three sketches, the authors illustrate the value of such an object in thinking about broad cultural issues. The article acts as a kind of boundary object by creating distinct, yet overlapping narratives from an object that is owned by many social worlds. The three sketches reveal Frankenstein as a thoughtful consideration about what it means to care for, or fail to care for, one’s creation, rather than as a cautionary tale about the evils of scientific hubris. Although infrastructures at universities often prevent interdisciplinary dialogue, the article concludes that purposeful boundary objects created around objects of care like Frankenstein can help build bridges and create shared meanings for new interdisciplinary spaces.

[1]  G. Lister Paradise lost? , 1995, The Journal of hand surgery.

[2]  Joachim Schummer,et al.  Teaching Societal and Ethical Implications of Nanotechnology to Engineering Students Through Science Fiction , 2005 .

[3]  R. Merton The unanticipated consequences of purposive social action , 1936 .

[4]  C. Bassett Better Made Up : The Mutual Influence of Science fiction and Innovation , 2013 .

[5]  Clark A. Miller,et al.  Thinking longer term about technology: is there value in science fiction-inspired approaches to constructing futures? , 2008 .

[6]  Maria Puig De La Bellacasa,et al.  Matters of care in technoscience: assembling neglected things. . , 2011 .

[7]  I. Lavender Race in American Science Fiction , 2011 .

[8]  Donna Harawy Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective , 2022, Philosophical Literary Journal Logos.

[9]  E. Hamilton Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes , 1942 .

[10]  J. Stilgoe,et al.  Developing a framework for responsible innovation* , 2013, The Ethics of Nanotechnology, Geoengineering and Clean Energy.

[11]  S. Jasanoff,et al.  Containing the Atom: Sociotechnical Imaginaries and Nuclear Power in the United States and South Korea , 2009 .

[12]  Anne K. Mellor Mary Shelley, her life, her fiction, her monsters , 1988 .

[13]  M. Halpern Across the great divide: Boundaries and boundary objects in art and science , 2012, Public understanding of science.

[14]  L. Winner Autonomous Technology: Technics-out-of-Control as a Theme in Political Thought , 1977 .

[15]  Barbara Adam,et al.  Futures Tended: Care and Future-Oriented Responsibility , 2011 .

[16]  David A. Kirby,et al.  The Future is Now , 2010 .

[17]  Colin Milburn,et al.  Nanotechnology in the Age of Posthuman Engineering: Science Fiction as Science , 2003 .

[18]  Meredith Miller Black Frankenstein: The Making of an American Metaphor , 2011 .

[19]  Susan Leigh Star,et al.  Institutional Ecology, `Translations' and Boundary Objects: Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 1907-39 , 1989 .

[20]  R. Berne Ethics, Technology, and the Future: An Intergenerational Experience in Engineering Education , 2003 .

[21]  C. Toumey The Moral Character of Mad Scientists: A Cultural Critique of Science , 1992 .

[22]  Cynthia Selin,et al.  The Sociology of the Future: Tracing Stories of Technology and Time , 2008 .

[23]  T. Moylan,et al.  Dark horizons : science fiction and the dystopian imagination , 2003 .

[24]  이명균,et al.  Frankenstein , 1995 .

[25]  S. Squier From Omega to Mr. Adam: The Importance of Literature for Feminist Science Studies , 1999 .

[26]  J. Sayers Against Method , 2016 .

[27]  Susan E. Babbitt,et al.  Whose Science? Whose Knowledge? Thinking from Women's Lives. , 1993 .

[28]  A. Mellor,et al.  On feminist utopias , 1982 .