Telling ecopoetic stories: Wax worms, care, and the cultivation of other sensibilities

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Abstract

Recently, a beekeeper discovered the metabolic wizardry of wax worms, their ability to decompose polyethylene. While this organism has usually been perceived as a model organism in science or a pest to beekeepers, it acquired a new mode of being as potentially probiotic inviting us to dream of a future without plastic waste. In this paper, I explore how wax worms are entangled with material practices of care and narratives that give meaning to these practices. These stories, however, are marked by manipulation, exploitation and extermination, and call for a questioning of our modes of caring. Consequently, I offer a counter-narrative that questions our anthropocentric practices of caring and the stories we attach to them. Borrowing Puig de la Bellacasa’s notion of ecopoetics, I tell an-other story based on my participation in the making of an art installation hosting wax worms. The installation creates an opening of a world of curiosity and cultivates a sensibility for wax worms expanding their modes of being and our capabilities of appreciation. In the end, I argue that by mattering and storying differently, we have the opportunity to challenge anthropocentric interests and make a different world of caring and co-existence possible.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Medical Humanities
ISSN1573-3645
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2024

Keywords

  • Faculty of Humanities
  • Artistic Research
  • Ecopoetics
  • Materiality
  • Posthumanism
  • care
  • Environmental Humanities
  • Faculty of Science
  • wax worms
  • Model organisms
  • Pest Control
  • Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
  • care
  • Environmental Health

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