1st Edition

Tracing the Atom Nuclear Legacies in Russia and Central Asia

Edited By Susanne Bauer, Tanja Penter Copyright 2022
230 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

230 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book is about nuclear legacies in Russia and Central Asia, focusing on selected sites of the Soviet atomic program, many of which have remained understudied. Nuclear operations, for energy or military purposes, demanded a vast infrastructure of production and supply chains that have transformed entire regions. In following the material traces of the atomic programs, contributors pay... Read more

Chapter 1

Susanne Bauer and Tanja Penter

Tracing the Atom. Nuclear Legacies in Russia and Central Asia

Part I. Past Futures: Soviet nuclear sciences and politics

Chapter 2

Stefan Guth

The Nuclear Landscape as a Garden. An Envirotechnical History of Shevchenko/Aqtau, 1959–2019

Chapter 3

Laura Sembritzki

Radiation Expertise in the Nuclear Landscapes of the Southern Urals in the 1950s and 1960s

Chapter 4

Olga Nikonova

Between Profession and Politics: Specialists in Radiation Medicine at the Combine No. 817 in the Chelyabinsk Region

Part II. Living with Nuclear Legacies

Chapter 5

Sophie Roche

Nuclear Relationalities: Contextualizing the Uranium Mining and Production Sites in Khujand/Leninabad

Chapter 6

Bettina Kaibach

The Satanic Cosmic Force: Nuclear Arms Technology in Soviet Fiction

Chapter 7

Tanja Penter

The Legal Heritage of the Atom: Dealing with Victims of Radioactive Contamination in the post-Soviet Space

Part III. Traces of Exposure and the Politics of Memory

Chapter 8

Eva Castringius

Witnesses to Radioactive Contamination

Chapter 9

Susanne Bauer

Fallout Memory Trajectories at Semipalatinsk: Reassembling the post-Soviet Past

Biography

Susanne Bauer is a professor of Science and Technology Studies (STS) at University of Oslo, Norway. Her research interests are in sociomaterial studies of technoscience and anthropogenic ecologies. She has widely published on life sciences in society, epidemiological data labor, biomedical infrastructuring, environmental health regulation, and post-Soviet nuclear aftermaths.

Tanja Penter is a professor of Eastern European history at Heidelberg University, Germany. She has extensively published on twentieth-century Soviet and post-Soviet history. She is a member of the German-Russian and the German-Ukrainian Commission of Historians and of the scientific advisory board of the German Historical Institute in Moscow.