
Radioactive Documentary
Description
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It is the first book to analyse independent documentary films about nuclear energy - it suggests an approach to documentary films as agents of change.
Each chapter of this book focuses on one of ten different documentary films made in Europe and North America since 1989. Each of these films works the material and the ideological heritage of the nuclear power industry into visions of the future. Dealing with the legacy of how ignorance and neglect led to accidents and failures the films offer different ways of understanding and moving on from the past. The documentary form itself can be understood as a collective means for the discovery of creative solutions and the communication of new narratives. In the case of these films the concepts of radioactivity and deep time in particular are used to bring together narrative and formal aesthetics in the process of reimagining the relationships between people and their environments.
Focusing on the representation of radioactive spaces in documentary and experimental art films, the study shows how moving images do more than communicate the risks and opportunities, and the tumultuous history, associated with atomic energy. They embody the effects of Cold War technologies as they persist into the present, acting as a reminder that the story is not over yet.
Primary readership will be academics and students working in environmental communication and in environmental humanities more broadly. For students of independent film or documentary it will also provide a clear picture of contemporary themes and creative practice.
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Content
Chapter 2: Radioactive past: Volker Koepp's Die Wismut (1993, Germany) and Suzan Baraza's Uranium Drive-In (2013, US)
Chapter 3: Radioactive present: Toshi Fujiwara's Mujin Chitai (No Man's Zone, 2012, Japan) and Nikolaus Geyrhalter's Pripyat (1999, Austria, Ukraine)
Chapter 4: Radioactive future: Michael Madsen's Into Eternity (2010, Denmark) and Peter Gallison and Rob Moss's Containment (2015, US)
Chapter 5: Radioactive past conditional: Volker Sattel's Unter Kontrolle (Under Control, 2011, Germany) and Ivy Meerapol's Indian Point (2015, US)
Chapter 6: Radioactive future conditional: Rob Stone's Pandora's Promise (2013, US) and Mika Taanila and Jussi Eerola's Atomin Paluu (Return of the Atom, 2015, Finland)
Chapter 7: Conclusion: Radioactive continuous present: Mark Cousin's Atomic: Living in Dread and Promise (2015, UK)
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