The Atomic Archipelago: Us Nuclear Submarines and Technopolitics of Risk in Cold War Italy

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Product Details
Price
$74.75
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
332
Dimensions
5.98 X 9.21 X 1.34 inches | 1.14 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780822947189

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About the Author
Davide Orsini is a science and technologies studies scholar studying the social, political, and ecological implications of nuclear power applications after the Second World War. He is currently a Marie Sklodowska Curie Fellow at the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society in Munich, where he is conducting a comparative research project on the history and socioecological aspects of nuclear power plant decommissioning.
Reviews
The Atomic Archipelago is not just an excellent historical study but also offers an original theoretical perspective on knowledge production in the field of radiological risk that can be useful to a range of scholars, not just experts of the Cold War.-- "Technology and Culture"
Submarines are some of the most ubiquitous yet understudied nuclear technologies in circulation. In this brilliant book, Davide Orsini takes readers on a deep dive into the history of the United States' Cold War nuclear submarine base in the Maddalena archipelago on the island of Sardinia in Italy. This rich and powerful historical ethnography sheds new light on radiological risk and contested knowledge production, the United States' increasingly itinerant postwar militarism, and memory in an archipelago long coveted for its strategic associations.--Mary X. Mitchell, University of Toronto
Orsini's book digs into the murky Cold War past of La Maddalena, when the Sardinian islands housed one of the largest US nuclear submarine bases in the Mediterranean. It thus admirably shows how classified defense imperatives placed the archipelago in state of law exception under the subservient eye of obliging Italian politicians, while the submarines' radiological risks featured as stodgy ingredients of an à la carte menu served to unknowing visitors and locals alike. The Atomic Archipelago finally unearths what, alarmingly, decades of deception have kept under wraps.--Simone Turchetti, author of Greening the Alliance: The Diplomacy of NATO's Science and Environmental Initiatives