Publications

The cover of this book has the title, Unmaking the Bomb, in red letters over a white background, with the bottom quarter of the book in black to highlight the subtitle in white.

Unmaking the Bomb: Environmental Cleanup and the Politics of Impossibility

Shannon Cram (School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, UW Bothell)

What does it mean to reckon with a contaminated world? In Unmaking the Bomb (UC, 2023), Shannon Cram considers the complex social politics of this question and the regulatory infrastructures designed to answer it. Blending history, ethnography, and memoir, she investigates remediation efforts at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, a former weapons complex in Washington State. Home to the majority of the nation's high-level nuclear waste and its largest environmental cleanup, Hanford is tasked with managing toxic materials that will long outlast the United States and its institutional capacities.

Cram examines the embodied uncertainties and structural impossibilities integral to that endeavor. In particular, this lyrical book engages in a kind of narrative contamination, toggling back and forth between cleanup's administrative frames and the stories that overspill them. It spends time with the statistical people that inhabit cleanup's metrics and models and the nonstatistical people that live with their effects. And, in the process, it explores the uneven social relations that make toxicity a normative condition.

Read more on the publisher's website.