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HOME OTHERWISE: Living Archives and Half‐Life Politics in Post‐Fallout Coastal Fukushima
Author(s) -
MORIMOTO RYO
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cultural anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.669
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1548-1360
pISSN - 0886-7356
DOI - 10.14506/ca36.4.05
Subject(s) - politics , nuclear disaster , sociology , environmental ethics , political science , law , philosophy , engineering , nuclear plant , nuclear engineering
While the 2011 nuclear disaster in Japan forced residents out of their coastal Fukushima homes, transforming familiar ecologies into sites of estrangement, Naoko and neighbors remain invested in the material objects and spiritual relations of their houses, within and despite the logics of contamination. These desires to repair domestic livelihoods to nurture a sense of home ( ie ) and the idea of dying well ( ii shinikata ) challenge critical theories of nuclear fallout, which frame contamination's impacts in terms of biopolitical logics and planetary scales. Thus, although contamination regiments the lives of residents through what I call a half‐life politics , their practices of house‐ing defy these strictures, as planetary contamination becomes experiential, ethnographic, and interscalar, and as people attempt to remake lives in an already injured and irradiated world.

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