
In the past few years, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) has become a hot commodity, saturating the fashion, jewelry and art worlds. Indeed, from microscopic blueprint to trendy household commodity, the image of the double helix has permeated the consumer consciousness - not without implicit social consequences.
“Spit parties” like the one recently organized by 23andMe have become the latest social-networking craze. Hereditary blueprints are now being turned into personalized perfumes and colognes. For a perfectly accurate, 21st-century self-portrait, you can even map your – or your pets’ – genetic coding in a one-of-a-kind work of art that resembles columns of blocks. All you have to worry about is which material – canvas, sheet aluminum or photographic paper – will look best on your living room wall.
It’s easy to say that personalization and narcissism are the forces driving this trend, but I do not believe those are the only forces at play. In a sense, DNA-related products have become, purposely or not, propaganda-like tools for the health and pharmaceutical industries.
For example, orchestrators of the Personal Genome Project cannot steal your DNA while you’re sleeping at night, nor can they make you submit a sample against your will. But what they can do is position their products and services so tactfully in the marketplace, and into the consumer consciousness, that we may actually find ourselves wanting to upload a DNA sample to a public database. “The Perfect Unique Gift Idea for the Person who has Everything!” DNA11’s tagline almost sounds like a subliminal advertisement from Huxley’s Brave New World or Orwell’s 1984, doesn’t it?
Let me be clear: I’m not saying that our current DNA craze is the result of a premeditated, nationwide conspiracy (I don’t want to get arrested, you know). But the fact that de-ox-y-ri-bo-nu-cle-ic acid has successfully made its way into the pop-culture marketplace can only better serve those individuals who seek it – and satisfy those companies that crave it.
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Our culture is shifting all around us. In Undercurrents, we present our observations and insights about where our society is heading.