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Curio about Polish physicist’s past bears a warning for the future

Ross McPherson
September 4th, 2018


This article is more than 6 years old.

A new comic book about Marie Curie’s life shines a light on our disconnect with science

Anja C Andersen, a professor in astrophysics at the University of Copenhagen, has co-written a comic book based on Marie Curie’s life in which she expresses her concerns about the growing disconnect between people and science.

‘Marie Curie – Et Lys I Mørket’ – which was released on August 30, co-written by Anja C and Frances Andreasen Østerfelt and illustrated by Polish artist Anna Anna Blaszczyk – tells the life-story of the two-time Nobel Prize winner, evoking moral undertones from the cultural hindrances of the time.

Curie’s extraordinary life was filled with both funny and tragic moments – making for a good comic book that appeals to a wide demographic.

As Andersen promises: “A one-year-old and 100-year-old can both read a comic book and come away with different information.”

 

GM food and flat-earthers
In the book, the authors express their concerns about the growing disconnect between the population and natural sciences. They argue that the growing anonymity of technology and lack of understanding among the general public about scientific method could lead to its demonisation and a slowing of progress/regression.

Andersen cites ethical fears about genetically-modified food and the increase in ‘flat-earthers’ as proof of the growing disconnect, contending that Curie’s life reflects many of the ethical dilemmas of the moment, and is therefore still relevant today.

The book further argues that a lack of diversity due to racism and sexism, two topics that are formative issues in Curie’s life, can hinder new discoveries, progress and culture.

Many sections of the book parallel the modern struggle for equality of opportunity, citing it as only a small issue in Denmark.


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