In western culture, as expressed in fiction and film, the master narrative concerning science and the pursuit of knowledge perpetuates the archetype of the alchemist/scientist as sinister, dangerous, and possibly mad. Like all myths this story may appear simplistic but its recurrence suggests that it embodies complex ideas and suppressed desires and fears that each generation must work through. This chapter explores some of the most influential examples of such characterization, links them to contemporary correlatives of the basic promises of alchemy and suggests reasons for the continuing power of such images.
History
Publication title
The Public Image of Chemistry
Editors
J Schummer, B Bensaude-Vincent, and B Van Tiggelen
Pagination
7-36
ISBN
978-981-277-584-9
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
Place of publication
United States
Extent
12
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in language, communication and culture