Kudankulam
The Story of an Indo-Russian Nuclear Power Plant
Price: 1395.00 INR
ISBN:
9780199498710
Publication date:
24/02/2020
Hardback
392 pages
216.0x140.0mm
Price: 1395.00 INR
ISBN:
9780199498710
Publication date:
24/02/2020
Hardback
392 pages
216.0x140.0mm
Raminder Kaur
Since the 1980s, the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu has faced multiple forms of resistance. Women and men from different walks of life have come together to combat the deadly radioactive repercussions and repression that come with the development of a high-security nuclear installation. Drawing upon their experiences, this historical and ethnographic study accounts for the anti-nuclear campaign’s part in ‘right-to-lives’ movements while engaging with the (re)production of knowledge and ignorance in the understanding of radiation, and efforts to create an evidence base in response to the otherwise unavailable or insufficient data on the environment and public health in India.
Rights: World Rights
Raminder Kaur
Description
Since the 1980s, the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu has faced multiple forms of resistance. Women and men from different walks of life—fishers, farmers, environmentalists, activists, writers, scholars, teachers, journalists, doctors, and lawyers among many others—have come together to combat the deadly radioactive repercussions and repression that come with the development of a high-security nuclear installation. Drawing upon their experiences, this historical and ethnographic study accounts for the anti-nuclear campaign’s part in ‘right-to-lives’ movements while engaging with the (re)production of knowledge and ignorance in the understanding of radiation, and efforts to create an evidence base in response to the otherwise unavailable or insufficient data on the environment and public health in India. Tracing the grassroots struggle for ‘energy justice’ off- and on-line, the author looks into the larger questions of development, democracy, and nationalism. These have marked not just parts of India identified for large-scale constructions, but also other regions of the world where state functionaries have much to gain from corporate collaborations at the cost of local residents who lose their livelihoods, and are forcibly displaced, persecuted, or even killed in order to execute governmental designs in the name of the nation.
About the Author
Raminder Kaur professor of anthropology and cultural studies in the School of Global Studies at the University of Sussex, United Kingdom
Raminder Kaur
Table of contents
List of Figures
Preface
Map
List of Abbreviations
- Radiation Burdens
- A Nuclear Paradise
- Cultures of Dissent
- The World of the In/visibles
- Full Lives
- The Plot Thickens
- Discipline and Deviance
- An Unlikely Powerhouse
- Digitalia
- Do We Exist?
- The Sparks That Hover
Epilogue
Index
About the Author
Raminder Kaur
Raminder Kaur
Review
‘Kaur writes with sympathy, empirical depth, and theoretical acuity about the movement to stop the construction of the nuclear reactors at Kudankulam.’ - Hugh Gusterson, Author of People of the Bomb: Portraits of America’s Nuclear Complex and Nuclear Rites: A Weapons Laboratory at the End of the Cold War
‘This exceptional book illuminates the social and political lives around the Kudankulam nuclear power plant by adopting a sharply focused ethnographic lens on the agency of people challenging the destructive pathways of capital. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the multifaceted ways in which environmental and social justice activism and collective struggles challenge the very basis of modernity and “development”.’ - Navtej Purewal, Professor of Political Sociology and Development Studies, SOAS, University of London, UK
‘Raminder Kaur provides a scholarly, insightful, and empathetic account of the heroic (or should it be heroinic) struggle waged against the construction of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant by the people of that area. Based on years of careful fieldwork, this book is a fitting tribute to that landmark struggle.’ - V. Ramana, Professor and Simons Chair in Disarmament, Global and Human Security Director, Liu Institute for Global Issues, University of British Columbia, Canada
Description
Since the 1980s, the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu has faced multiple forms of resistance. Women and men from different walks of life—fishers, farmers, environmentalists, activists, writers, scholars, teachers, journalists, doctors, and lawyers among many others—have come together to combat the deadly radioactive repercussions and repression that come with the development of a high-security nuclear installation. Drawing upon their experiences, this historical and ethnographic study accounts for the anti-nuclear campaign’s part in ‘right-to-lives’ movements while engaging with the (re)production of knowledge and ignorance in the understanding of radiation, and efforts to create an evidence base in response to the otherwise unavailable or insufficient data on the environment and public health in India. Tracing the grassroots struggle for ‘energy justice’ off- and on-line, the author looks into the larger questions of development, democracy, and nationalism. These have marked not just parts of India identified for large-scale constructions, but also other regions of the world where state functionaries have much to gain from corporate collaborations at the cost of local residents who lose their livelihoods, and are forcibly displaced, persecuted, or even killed in order to execute governmental designs in the name of the nation.
About the Author
Raminder Kaur professor of anthropology and cultural studies in the School of Global Studies at the University of Sussex, United Kingdom
Read MoreReviews
‘Kaur writes with sympathy, empirical depth, and theoretical acuity about the movement to stop the construction of the nuclear reactors at Kudankulam.’ - Hugh Gusterson, Author of People of the Bomb: Portraits of America’s Nuclear Complex and Nuclear Rites: A Weapons Laboratory at the End of the Cold War
‘This exceptional book illuminates the social and political lives around the Kudankulam nuclear power plant by adopting a sharply focused ethnographic lens on the agency of people challenging the destructive pathways of capital. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the multifaceted ways in which environmental and social justice activism and collective struggles challenge the very basis of modernity and “development”.’ - Navtej Purewal, Professor of Political Sociology and Development Studies, SOAS, University of London, UK
‘Raminder Kaur provides a scholarly, insightful, and empathetic account of the heroic (or should it be heroinic) struggle waged against the construction of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant by the people of that area. Based on years of careful fieldwork, this book is a fitting tribute to that landmark struggle.’ - V. Ramana, Professor and Simons Chair in Disarmament, Global and Human Security Director, Liu Institute for Global Issues, University of British Columbia, Canada
Read MoreTable of contents
List of Figures
Preface
Map
List of Abbreviations
- Radiation Burdens
- A Nuclear Paradise
- Cultures of Dissent
- The World of the In/visibles
- Full Lives
- The Plot Thickens
- Discipline and Deviance
- An Unlikely Powerhouse
- Digitalia
- Do We Exist?
- The Sparks That Hover
Epilogue
Index
About the Author
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