Disarming Doomsday Disarming Doomsday
Radical Geography

Disarming Doomsday

The Human Impact of Nuclear Weapons since Hiroshima

    • £23.99
    • £23.99

Publisher Description

***Winner of the L.H.M. Ling Outstanding First Book Prize 2020***

***Shortlisted for the Bread and Roses Award 2020***

Since the first atomic bomb exploded over Hiroshima, the history of nuclear warfare has been tangled with the spaces and places of scientific research and weapons testing, armament and disarmament, pacifism and proliferation. Nuclear geography gives us the tools to understand these events, and the extraordinary human cost of nuclear weapons.

Disarming Doomsday explores the secret history of nuclear weapons by studying the places they build and tear apart, from Los Alamos to Hiroshima. It looks at the legacy of nuclear imperialism from weapons testing on Christmas Island and across the South Pacific, as well as the lasting harm this has caused to indigenous communities and the soldiers that conducted the tests.


For the first time, these complex geographies are tied together. Disarming Doomsday takes us forward, describing how geographers and geotechnology continue to shape nuclear war, and, perhaps, help to prevent it.

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2019
20 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
192
Pages
PUBLISHER
Pluto Press
SIZE
14.6
MB
Geographies of Digital Exclusion Geographies of Digital Exclusion
2022
Society Despite the State Society Despite the State
2024
Stopping Oil Stopping Oil
2023
In Their Place In Their Place
2017
New Borders New Borders
2018
Space Invaders Space Invaders
2017