Shakespeare the metallurgist, Eliot the spectroscopist: the cultural journey of the chemical elements

View Shakespeare the metallurgist, Eliot the spectroscopist: the cultural journey of the chemical elements

Presenter: Hugh Aldersley-Williams

Published: November 2012

Age: 22 and upwards

Views: 1776 views

Tags: element metal discovery use

Type: Lectures

Source/institution: Royal Society


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From the moment of their discovery, each of the chemical elements has embarked on a journey into our culture. Over millennia and decades, they have gained meaning through encounter and manipulation. Those long known, such as gold, silver, iron and sulphur, all found in the Bible, have largely settled associations with immortality, virginity, strength and evil. The arts exploit, renew and modify these meanings often in surprising ways. Most of us are familiar with sodium chiefly from streetlighting. But why has this distinctive illumination been seized upon by contemporary writers as emblematic of dystopian decay? Why is its message so different from the light of neon? Why is mercury a fitting barrier between this world and the next? And why is europium incorporated into every euro banknote?

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