On April 26, 1986, Unit Four of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor
exploded in then Soviet Ukraine. More than 3.5 million people in
Ukraine alone, not to mention many citizens of surrounding
countries, are still suffering the effects. "Life Exposed" is the
first book to comprehensively examine the vexed political,
scientific, and social circumstances that followed the disaster.
Tracing the story from an initial lack of disclosure to post-Soviet
democratizing attempts to compensate sufferers, Adriana Petryna
uses anthropological tools to take us into a world whose social
realities are far more immediate and stark than those described by
policymakers and scientists. She asks: What happens to politics
when state officials fail to inform their fellow citizens of real
threats to life? What are the moral and political consequences of
remedies available in the wake of technological disasters?
Through extensive research in state institutions, clinics,
laboratories, and with affected families and workers of the
so-called Zone, Petryna illustrates how the event and its aftermath
have not only shaped the course of an independent nation but have
made health a negotiated realm of entitlement. She tracks the
emergence of a "biological citizenship" in which assaults on health
become the coinage through which sufferers stake claims for
biomedical resources, social equity, and human rights. "Life
Exposed" provides an anthropological framework for understanding
the politics of emergent democracies, the nature of citizenship
claims, and everyday forms of survival as they are interwoven with
the profound changes that accompanied the collapse of the Soviet
Union.
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