Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein

Just over two hundred years ago the young daughter of two philosophers and feminists wrote the first scifi novel, and it’s one that is etched into our cultural imagination of the horrors of science forevermore. That novel is Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. But how many of us have actually read this classic?

If you’re not planning on reading it anytime soon, you can at least get a sneak peek through dr. Kathryn Harkup’s podcast. The author of “Making the Monster: The Science Behind Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein,” dr. Harkup takes you through the bizarre historical context of Shelley’s time. The curious invention of the battery, weird experiments with electricity, and grave robbing are some of the highlights. Ethical standards, anyone?

You can find a lot of this context dramatized in some of the many films and series based on Frankenstein. The recent The Frankenstein Chronicles, for instance, stars Sean Bean as a sort of Sherlock Holmes who gets in way over his head with grave robbers and pseudo-scientists. Robert De Niro starred as the monster in 1994’s Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. And of course there’s the classic flick from 1931 with Boris Karloff as the archetypal portrayal of the monster.

Finally, there’s an interesting little factoid that connects Mary Shelley’s novel to our current pandemic. She was bored and stuck indoors with some friends in the summer of 1816. Do you know why? Kathryn Harkup can tell you 😀

 

Read the book for free online through Project Gutenberg, on a computer screen or on an e-reader. And join us in discussing it on June 3rd with the Online Book Club organized by SG, VOX Delft, and Hesiodos!

CCP Extra | Zondag 24 Mei Van Leeuwenhoeklezing: 100 km/u? door Bert van Wee

Zondag 24 mei van 11.00 – 12.00 uur livestream vanuit Theater de Veste
Met Hoogleraar Transportbeleid Bert van Wee, introductie door Vice Rector Magnificus Rob Mudde.

Net voor het uitbreken van de coronacrisis ging de maatregel van maximaal 100km/u op de snelweg van kracht. In de eerste weken heeft dat weinig oproer veroorzaakt, omdat het betrekkelijk rustig was op de wegen. Nu we langzaam steeds vaker de weg opgaan worden we opeens weer geconfronteerd met deze maatregel. Hoe zat het ook alweer? Wat was de aanleiding? Wat zijn de voor- en nadelen van deze snelheidsverlaging? Denk aan reistijden, verkeersveiligheid, milieueffecten en natuurlijk ook de positie van stikstof. En hoe weeg je die voor- en nadelen onderling af? En wat komt er uit die afweging, is het wel of niet een goed idee om de snelheid te verlagen?

Bert van Wee, Hoogleraar Transportbeleid aan de TU Delft, geeft in deze eerste online editie van de van Leeuwenhoeklezing antwoord op bovenstaande vragen.

Corona Care Package #37 | A Future Filled With Pathogens

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Tuesday’s post: A Future Filled With Pathogens
Tuesday’s post: Halt destruction of nature or suffer even worse pandemics
Monday’s post: It’s OK to Feel NOT OK Right Now

Tuesday 19 May | A Future Filled With Pathogens

From increased contact with wildlife populations to ancient bacteria being thawed out of the ice, author and journalist Dahr Jamail details some of the reasons why COVID-19 will not be the last pandemic in our lifetime. It’s a stern warning and difficult to hear right now: that COVID-19 is only the beginning, and that essentially it’s our own fault.

Scientists in The Guardian take it a step further and urge the world to curb climate change and the destruction of nature. Nature’s health translates to human health, they argue, so protecting nature is the rational thing to do. Otherwise we’ll have to keep hoping for a cure or vaccine for each new disease that hits us.

What do you think? Can you imagine a future filled with pathogens? (If so, what would that world look like?) Or do you doubt these scientists’ conclusions and predictions? If protecting nature is the rational thing to do, does that mean we’ll actually do it? And if we do respond proactively, who are the “we” that need to take action? So many if’s!

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #36 | It’s OK to Feel NOT OK Right Now – Alain de Botton

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Monday’s post: It’s OK to Feel NOT OK Right Now

Monday 18 May | It’s OK to Feel NOT OK Right Now – Alain de Botton

Be nice to yourself! “The School of Life” co-founder Alain de Botton talks about our collective emotional state during a global pandemic. He touches on the traps of expectations to constantly feel great and put on a brave face, and how there is freedom in acknowledging our vulnerabilities. And Alain shares some thoughts on treating ourselves better.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

CCP Extra | Biomimicry symposium live stream, Tuesday the 19th at 8pm!

Every year, S4S (Students4Sustainability) hosts a big sustainability event in the Aula. Despite the physical restrictions placed on them by the pandemic this year, the students at S4S are determined to bring it again and so we’ll have our first fully online symposium Powered By SG on May 19th!

The theme this year is biomimicry. Biomimicry is the imitation of models, systems, and processes in nature to solve human problems. There are great examples out there already, like the famous kingfisher-nosed bullet train, but also less famous ones like sharkskin swimwear and termite mound-inspired architecture. Such designs help to increase efficiency, health, speed, and the like.

But just because you’re learning from nature to improve your design, that doesn’t mean that your design is automatically more sustainable, does it? We’re curious to see what the speakers at this symposium will say about using biomimicry to advance climate and eco-friendly designs. And to see what sort of questions you will field during the online discussion. Keep an eye out on social media (Facebook or Instagram) for the link to the live stream.

Unrelated side note: did you know that the word symposium comes from the ancient Greek sympósion, which literally meant “drinking together;” an intellectual party where everyone got utterly wasted on wine. Since people won’t actually be coming together physically for this symposium, I think it’s time to coin a new word that means “drinking apart together.” If you’re an ancient Greek language buff do let us know what this word should be.

Note: this event was recorded. Watch it here or click on the link at the top of the video to go to YouTube.

Corona Care Package #35 | We\Visit: combatting loneliness with video calling

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Friday’s post: Combatting loneliness with video calling
Thursday’s post: Why we do not want to talk about the economic effects
Wednesday’s post: The power of images
Tuesday’s post: We’re Stuck in a Science Fiction Novel
Monday’s post: Universal Basic Income & Mental Health

Friday 15 May | We\Visit: combatting loneliness with video calling

From our colleagues at TUDelft Stories:

Visiting a loved one who’s critically ill: normally that’s possible, but due to the coronavirus, visiting ICUs is no longer permitted. The result is a lonely fight behind closed doors. In an attempt to combat the loneliness, researchers at Delft University of Technology have come up with We\Visit: a tool that facilitates video-calling by appointment. And it was developed at lightning speed after the Reinier de Graaf hospital sounded the alarm.

Check out the article and www.tudelft.nl/en/stories/ for more TUDelft Stories!

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

CCP Extra | Tonight at 8pm: Online Workshop Abstract Painting

HESIODOS​, the creative platform of TU Delft, would like to invite you to their first online event! Thursday the 14th of May, at 8pm, they are hosting an abstract painting event where you can all paint on your own, while watching and getting tips from amazing guest artist Mahtab Sharifi​. Bring whatever you have laying around: acrylics, markers, color pencils… a piece of paper or a canvas and paint along with us with the theme “connect with your body”.
Mahtab is not only studying for her Master’s degree EPA at TPM, but also an incredible freelance artist. Hesiodos has published numerous paintings of hers in the past. If you want to see her painting process and what goes through her mind while creating these pieces of art don’t miss this evening!

How to join​: the link for the zoom meeting is ​https://tudelft.zoom.us/j/93742889546​, just remember the 14th of May at 8pm.

Finally, the Hesiodos editorial board (all volunteer students and staff) would like to remind you that we have an open call of art for our magazine until the 16th of May, so if you have a creative soul and want to share your creations with the rest of your colleagues at TUDelft, please send us your works at ​contact@hesiodos.nl​.

For more information on the magazine’s publishing process and future events visit their webpage ​www.hesiodos.nl​ and follow them on social media: @Hesiodosdelft, fb: /hesiodosdelft.
See you on Thursday!

Corona Care Package #34 | Why we do not want to talk about the economic effects

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Thursday’s post: Why we do not want to talk about the economic effects
Wednesday’s post: The power of images
Tuesday’s post: We’re Stuck in a Science Fiction Novel
Monday’s post: Universal Basic Income & Mental Health

Thursday 14 May | Why we do not want to talk about the economic effects | Caspar Chorus

Now that we seem to have ‘flattened the curve’ and the number of corona victims reduces, our eyes are opened to the ravage the crisis has left. The government is still pressing us to stay home as much as possible, but we are getting restless. We look around and see the damage to our company, family, education or psychology. And the cry for a hopeful perspective gets louder. Yet, we still are reluctant to let go of the measures altogether in order to save the economy. Why is that?

In this short video, professor of choice behavior Caspar Chorus (TPM faculty, TU Delft) explains our reluctance to talk about the economic effects of the corona measures.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #33 | The power of images: the people working in health care

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Wednesday’s post: The power of images
Tuesday’s post: We’re Stuck in a Science Fiction Novel
Monday’s post: Universal Basic Income & Mental Health

Wednesday 13 May | The power of images: the people working in health care

After weeks of uncertainty, the dust that the corona pandemic has spread seems to settle a little. Fewer cases of infection and disease are announced every day. The measures have loosened a bit, so now we can breathe a bit easier. Perhaps this applies most to the health care workers, who have been working around the clock for the last few weeks. Who are those people who have been fighting on the front line?

Arts are a great way to add a face and a feeling to abstract matters. And photography can tell an entire story with a single image. In this series of portraits of health care workers, the power of the image is shown once more. Check out this powerful series and see who the people behind the masks are.

Text is in Dutch, but the portraits speak for themselves. By photographer Jiri Büller.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #32 | We’re Stuck in a Science Fiction Novel

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Tuesday’s post: We’re Stuck in a Science Fiction Novel
Monday’s post: Universal Basic Income & Mental Health

Tuesday 12 May | We’re Stuck in a Science Fiction Novel

Sci-fi author Kim Stanley Robinson suggests we’re all stuck in a science-fiction novel.

The drastic changes to society, the draconian measures taken by some governments, the sense of being in a historic period, and the speed in which it has all happened seem more typical for fiction than for reality. Even as Wuhan was paralyzed in January and February, most of us didn’t imagine what the corona virus would do to us at home. But now, says Robinson, “The virus is rewriting our imaginations.”

Characters in science fiction often deal with massive changes to their reality. Aliens, terminators, time machines, etc. Reading about how they deal with those changes can, according to Robinson, make us better equipped to deal with our own uncertain future. It shows us how to rethink reality, how to turn on a dime when the situation demands it.

If you look at it this way, the corona pandemic (our current “sci-fi” reality) could be a major lesson in dealing with global crises. A warm-up for the next sci-fi script that we’ll find ourselves in. What do you think? Has our experience of reality shifted? Will we be better equipped to imagine a world after the climate crisis? And finally, what do you do when you find out you’re a character in a novel?

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.