“Nuclear Poetics: Energizing Social Forms in Cold War America” argues that Black, Indigenous, queer, feminist, and anti-capitalist poet-activists were instrumental in shaping the anti-nuclear movement in the U.S. during the 1970’s and 80’s. These poets demonstrate how nuclear power both extends and intensifies white supremacist, patriarchal, capitalist, and settler logics. In turn, these anti-nuclear ideologies and imaginaries shaped and sustained social movements during this period. “Demonstration” as a method of representation and a type of action names how poetry articulates the obscured and contradictory logics of the nuclear age to generate new socio-ecological relations. In demonstrating the nuclear complex’s many forms—including weap...
Researching the “nuclear” narrative in North American writing practices in the post-Chernobyl times ...
Since the dawn of the nuclear age small groups of activists have consistently protested both the con...
This project seeks to better understand the sinister cultural impacts of nuclear weapons in America ...
“Nuclear Poetics: Energizing Social Forms in Cold War America” argues that Black, Indigenous, queer,...
This essay explores the faultlines, poetic pressures and social structures of feeling determining po...
American Anti-Nuclear Activism, 1975-1990 is a history of a series of anti-nuclear campaigns that to...
This dissertation investigates “affiliation” as a socio-spatial poetics and spatial ontology, a depa...
Since the first atomic explosion in 1945 the United States has dedicated more economic, human, and e...
This thesis examines the function and presentation of “Nature” in American literature written betwee...
This thesis is an investigation of the relationship between imaginative writing and the nuclear stat...
Placing the Bomb uses journalism, essays and literature to complicate the idea of the nuclear sublim...
Post Apocalyptic Vision and Survivance: Nuclear Writings in Native American and Japan examines the ...
The history of nuclear power in the United States began with the top-secret Manhattan Project (1942-...
Book description: How advanced is our knowledge about the dynamics of political and social activism?...
"July 2014."Dissertation Supervisor: Dr. Clarence Lo.Includes vita.In the present study, I criticall...
Researching the “nuclear” narrative in North American writing practices in the post-Chernobyl times ...
Since the dawn of the nuclear age small groups of activists have consistently protested both the con...
This project seeks to better understand the sinister cultural impacts of nuclear weapons in America ...
“Nuclear Poetics: Energizing Social Forms in Cold War America” argues that Black, Indigenous, queer,...
This essay explores the faultlines, poetic pressures and social structures of feeling determining po...
American Anti-Nuclear Activism, 1975-1990 is a history of a series of anti-nuclear campaigns that to...
This dissertation investigates “affiliation” as a socio-spatial poetics and spatial ontology, a depa...
Since the first atomic explosion in 1945 the United States has dedicated more economic, human, and e...
This thesis examines the function and presentation of “Nature” in American literature written betwee...
This thesis is an investigation of the relationship between imaginative writing and the nuclear stat...
Placing the Bomb uses journalism, essays and literature to complicate the idea of the nuclear sublim...
Post Apocalyptic Vision and Survivance: Nuclear Writings in Native American and Japan examines the ...
The history of nuclear power in the United States began with the top-secret Manhattan Project (1942-...
Book description: How advanced is our knowledge about the dynamics of political and social activism?...
"July 2014."Dissertation Supervisor: Dr. Clarence Lo.Includes vita.In the present study, I criticall...
Researching the “nuclear” narrative in North American writing practices in the post-Chernobyl times ...
Since the dawn of the nuclear age small groups of activists have consistently protested both the con...
This project seeks to better understand the sinister cultural impacts of nuclear weapons in America ...