Frankenstein’s Monster Comes Home: The ‘Two Cultures’ in Remix

Authors

  • James Barrett Umeå University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v2i2.794

Keywords:

Remix, authorship, digital culture, c p snow, Frankenstein

Abstract

Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus by Mary Shelley (1818) is the starting point for this reading of remix in relation to authorship and its implications for creative work. The monster in Frankenstein has no single author, or father, and is damned by his mixed parentage as much as by his inability to recreate himself. Alone, he falls into the waste as a product of the divide between poetry and science. The ‘two cultures’ coined by C. P. Snow (1956) address this same divide and lament its dominance in mid twentieth-century intellectual life. But contemporary remix culture that relies on digital media closes this gap as poets now write code and artists are technicians. In my close reading of five remixes I show that origin is no longer relevant in the mixed material realization of processes that are performed or ‘re-authored’ in reception. In these remixes the creator reinterprets by changing the context of remixed elements in the works. The result is textual hybrids that are remixed further in reception.

Author Biography

James Barrett, Umeå University

James Barrett is an adjunct and PhD candidate in the Department of Language Studies and HUMlab at Umeå University in Sweden. Barrett’s PhD thesis (to be defended in the Fall 2013) is entitled "The Ergodic Revisited: Spatiality as a Governing Principle of Reading Digital Narrative", which examines how reading is governed by the spatial in four works of digital literature. Barrett teaches and has published on digital interaction, cultural studies, literature and narrative design in 2D and 3D media. His blog is http://www.soulsphincter.com/

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Published

2013-09-20

How to Cite

Barrett, J. (2013). Frankenstein’s Monster Comes Home: The ‘Two Cultures’ in Remix. uthorship, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v2i2.794

Issue

Section

Special Topic: Remix