MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYL

The paper emphasizes the literary dimensions of duality, related to ‘the invisible nuclear’ in U.S. writing practices (from the late Cold War up to the present), covered by the post-Chernobyl Age, while highlighting he ethical aspects of nuclear energy related issues in the post-traumatic societies....

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Main Author: Inna M. Sukhenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alfred Nobel University Publisher 2019-12-01
Series:Вісник університету ім. А. Нобеля. Серія Філологічні науки
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Online Access:https://phil.duan.edu.ua/images/PDF/2019/2/Phil_2_18_2019-205-212.pdf
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author Inna M. Sukhenko
author_facet Inna M. Sukhenko
author_sort Inna M. Sukhenko
collection DOAJ
description The paper emphasizes the literary dimensions of duality, related to ‘the invisible nuclear’ in U.S. writing practices (from the late Cold War up to the present), covered by the post-Chernobyl Age, while highlighting he ethical aspects of nuclear energy related issues in the post-traumatic societies. The paper is focused on studying the literary implications of ‘the invisible nuclear’ in depicting a nuclear power plant disaster (the Chernobyl NPP explosion) and its aftermath in North American fictional works such as Frederik Pohl’s Chernobyl (1987), Andrea White’s Radiant Girl (2008), and Orest Stelmach’s The Boy from Reactor 4 (2011). The paper intends to study the transformations of ‘the nuclear invisible” in the U.S. nuclear fiction on Chernobyl disaster, which helps to define the cultural and social parameters of the unbiased perception of nuclear energy as a concept for further impact on public acceptance of the nuclear technology. This paper intends to studying the implications of ‘the invisible nuclear’ in its cultural and social representations of the nuclear energy, giving rise to the socio-cultural and social-technical shifts in reconsidering the perception of the nuclear energy issues (related to nuclear power plants’ functioning). I highlight intentionally the literary dimensions of academia’s reflections on the nuclear related issues, coming from nuclear weapon industry and policy, because the contemporary nuclear discourse requires the strict separation of ‘nuclear war’ narrative and ‘nuclear energy’ narrative, which have the different policies of their implications as well as the different messages in the nuclear discourse: when a nuclear war as well as nuclear weapons are narrated as an absolute textual, nuclear energy and nuclear power, commonly represented in ‘atom for peace’ policy is still a subject of materialization which encourages the hot debates.
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series Вісник університету ім. А. Нобеля. Серія Філологічні науки
spelling doaj-art-c87fd561ce6a4734a16d58d4c3694f052025-08-20T03:57:43ZengAlfred Nobel University PublisherВісник університету ім. А. Нобеля. Серія Філологічні науки2523-44632523-47492019-12-0121820521210.32342/2523-4463-2019-2-18-15MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYLInna M. Sukhenko0Oles Honchar Dnipro National UniversityThe paper emphasizes the literary dimensions of duality, related to ‘the invisible nuclear’ in U.S. writing practices (from the late Cold War up to the present), covered by the post-Chernobyl Age, while highlighting he ethical aspects of nuclear energy related issues in the post-traumatic societies. The paper is focused on studying the literary implications of ‘the invisible nuclear’ in depicting a nuclear power plant disaster (the Chernobyl NPP explosion) and its aftermath in North American fictional works such as Frederik Pohl’s Chernobyl (1987), Andrea White’s Radiant Girl (2008), and Orest Stelmach’s The Boy from Reactor 4 (2011). The paper intends to study the transformations of ‘the nuclear invisible” in the U.S. nuclear fiction on Chernobyl disaster, which helps to define the cultural and social parameters of the unbiased perception of nuclear energy as a concept for further impact on public acceptance of the nuclear technology. This paper intends to studying the implications of ‘the invisible nuclear’ in its cultural and social representations of the nuclear energy, giving rise to the socio-cultural and social-technical shifts in reconsidering the perception of the nuclear energy issues (related to nuclear power plants’ functioning). I highlight intentionally the literary dimensions of academia’s reflections on the nuclear related issues, coming from nuclear weapon industry and policy, because the contemporary nuclear discourse requires the strict separation of ‘nuclear war’ narrative and ‘nuclear energy’ narrative, which have the different policies of their implications as well as the different messages in the nuclear discourse: when a nuclear war as well as nuclear weapons are narrated as an absolute textual, nuclear energy and nuclear power, commonly represented in ‘atom for peace’ policy is still a subject of materialization which encourages the hot debates.https://phil.duan.edu.ua/images/PDF/2019/2/Phil_2_18_2019-205-212.pdfnuclear fictionnuclear narrativenuclear criticismnuclear invisibleduality
spellingShingle Inna M. Sukhenko
MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYL
Вісник університету ім. А. Нобеля. Серія Філологічні науки
nuclear fiction
nuclear narrative
nuclear criticism
nuclear invisible
duality
title MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYL
title_full MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYL
title_fullStr MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYL
title_full_unstemmed MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYL
title_short MATERIALIZATION OF “THE INVISIBLE NUCLEAR” IN U.S. NUCLEAR FICTION ON CHERNOBYL
title_sort materialization of the invisible nuclear in u s nuclear fiction on chernobyl
topic nuclear fiction
nuclear narrative
nuclear criticism
nuclear invisible
duality
url https://phil.duan.edu.ua/images/PDF/2019/2/Phil_2_18_2019-205-212.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT innamsukhenko materializationoftheinvisiblenuclearinusnuclearfictiononchernobyl