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Radiation Nation - Three Mile Island and the Political Transformation of the 1970s (Paperback)
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Radiation Nation - Three Mile Island and the Political Transformation of the 1970s (Paperback)
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On March 28, 1979, the worst nuclear reactor accident in U.S.
history occurred at the Three Mile Island power plant in Central
Pennsylvania. Radiation Nation tells the story of what happened
that day and in the months and years that followed, as local
residents tried to make sense of the emergency. The near-meltdown
occurred at a pivotal moment when the New Deal coalition was
unraveling, trust in government was eroding, conservatives were
consolidating their power, and the political left was becoming
marginalized. Using the accident to explore this turning point,
Natasha Zaretsky provides a fresh interpretation of the era by
disclosing how atomic and ecological imaginaries shaped the
conservative ascendancy. Drawing on the testimony of the men and
women who lived in the shadow of the reactor, Radiation Nation
shows that the region's citizens, especially its mothers, grew
convinced that they had sustained radiological injuries that
threatened their reproductive futures. Taking inspiration from the
antiwar, environmental, and feminist movements, women at Three Mile
Island crafted a homegrown ecological politics that wove together
concerns over radiological threats to the body, the struggle over
abortion and reproductive rights, and eroding trust in authority.
This politics was shaped above all by what Zaretsky calls "biotic
nationalism," a new body-centered nationalism that imagined the
nation as a living, mortal being and portrayed sickened Americans
as evidence of betrayal. The first cultural history of the
accident, Radiation Nation reveals the surprising ecological
dimensions of post-Vietnam conservatism while showing how growing
anxieties surrounding bodily illness infused the political
realignment of the 1970s in ways that blurred any easy distinction
between left and right.
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