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Nuclear Soundscapes: Exploring Sound in Radioactive Environments

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Nuclear Soundscapes: Exploring Sound in Radioactive Environments. / Pantsidou, Maria; Li, Jade.
In: AM Journal of Art and Media Studies, No. 25, 458, 30.09.2021, p. 1-12.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Pantsidou M, Li J. Nuclear Soundscapes: Exploring Sound in Radioactive Environments. AM Journal of Art and Media Studies. 2021 Sept 30;(25):1-12. 458. Epub 2021 Sept 15. doi: 10.25038/am.v0i25.458

Author

Pantsidou, Maria ; Li, Jade. / Nuclear Soundscapes : Exploring Sound in Radioactive Environments. In: AM Journal of Art and Media Studies. 2021 ; No. 25. pp. 1-12.

Bibtex

@article{4eb3c981b0734325816304b0aa6f5421,
title = "Nuclear Soundscapes: Exploring Sound in Radioactive Environments",
abstract = "Just after World War II, mounting evidence marked the dawn of the geological epoch dubbed the Anthropocene. Nuclear explosions deposited radioactive debris in the geological strata, combined with an acceleration in resource extraction, population growth and energy consumption. In this light, this paper aims to explore the affective dimensions of the multiplicities of sounds that are interconnected to nuclear materialities. We argue that mediations of nuclear sounds in these forms of audio instances render nuclear sounds comprehensible and challenge existing representations of nuclear power. This paper will bring into conversation an archive of soundscapes of the nuclear epoch – for example the sound of beeping in a nuclear power plant that produces electricity, the Geiger-M{\"u}ller counters that civilians used following the Fukushima-Daichii plant explosion, and the music composition by JLiat of the sonic representation of atomic testing on Bikini Atoll in 1946. Engaging with these sounds serves to make sense of the nuclear sublime and offer a possibility of connecting with the “otherness” of nuclear materials. These sonic instances also bind people in collective ecological experiences, whilst making us more attuned to voicing the modalities of a damaged planet. Sound can serve as an articulation of affects that emerge between human and non-human materialities in a damaged planet. These conceptualizations of sound are used to articulate the ways individuals or groups embody their relationships to ecological environments. Through an interdisciplinary lens, the paper aims to explore the mechanics of sound in nuclear infrastructures and devices to challenge common metaphors about nuclear energy. Through the analysis of these soundscapes, we demonstrate that exposing these entanglements between human and nuclear materialities can help us make sense of the sociocultural dimensions of living in a radioactive planet.",
keywords = "affect theory, nuclear soundscapes, sonic representations, ecological degradation, radioactive terrains, nuclear music projects",
author = "Maria Pantsidou and Jade Li",
year = "2021",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.25038/am.v0i25.458",
language = "English",
pages = "1--12",
journal = "AM Journal of Art and Media Studies",
issn = "2217-9666",
number = "25",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nuclear Soundscapes

T2 - Exploring Sound in Radioactive Environments

AU - Pantsidou, Maria

AU - Li, Jade

PY - 2021/9/30

Y1 - 2021/9/30

N2 - Just after World War II, mounting evidence marked the dawn of the geological epoch dubbed the Anthropocene. Nuclear explosions deposited radioactive debris in the geological strata, combined with an acceleration in resource extraction, population growth and energy consumption. In this light, this paper aims to explore the affective dimensions of the multiplicities of sounds that are interconnected to nuclear materialities. We argue that mediations of nuclear sounds in these forms of audio instances render nuclear sounds comprehensible and challenge existing representations of nuclear power. This paper will bring into conversation an archive of soundscapes of the nuclear epoch – for example the sound of beeping in a nuclear power plant that produces electricity, the Geiger-Müller counters that civilians used following the Fukushima-Daichii plant explosion, and the music composition by JLiat of the sonic representation of atomic testing on Bikini Atoll in 1946. Engaging with these sounds serves to make sense of the nuclear sublime and offer a possibility of connecting with the “otherness” of nuclear materials. These sonic instances also bind people in collective ecological experiences, whilst making us more attuned to voicing the modalities of a damaged planet. Sound can serve as an articulation of affects that emerge between human and non-human materialities in a damaged planet. These conceptualizations of sound are used to articulate the ways individuals or groups embody their relationships to ecological environments. Through an interdisciplinary lens, the paper aims to explore the mechanics of sound in nuclear infrastructures and devices to challenge common metaphors about nuclear energy. Through the analysis of these soundscapes, we demonstrate that exposing these entanglements between human and nuclear materialities can help us make sense of the sociocultural dimensions of living in a radioactive planet.

AB - Just after World War II, mounting evidence marked the dawn of the geological epoch dubbed the Anthropocene. Nuclear explosions deposited radioactive debris in the geological strata, combined with an acceleration in resource extraction, population growth and energy consumption. In this light, this paper aims to explore the affective dimensions of the multiplicities of sounds that are interconnected to nuclear materialities. We argue that mediations of nuclear sounds in these forms of audio instances render nuclear sounds comprehensible and challenge existing representations of nuclear power. This paper will bring into conversation an archive of soundscapes of the nuclear epoch – for example the sound of beeping in a nuclear power plant that produces electricity, the Geiger-Müller counters that civilians used following the Fukushima-Daichii plant explosion, and the music composition by JLiat of the sonic representation of atomic testing on Bikini Atoll in 1946. Engaging with these sounds serves to make sense of the nuclear sublime and offer a possibility of connecting with the “otherness” of nuclear materials. These sonic instances also bind people in collective ecological experiences, whilst making us more attuned to voicing the modalities of a damaged planet. Sound can serve as an articulation of affects that emerge between human and non-human materialities in a damaged planet. These conceptualizations of sound are used to articulate the ways individuals or groups embody their relationships to ecological environments. Through an interdisciplinary lens, the paper aims to explore the mechanics of sound in nuclear infrastructures and devices to challenge common metaphors about nuclear energy. Through the analysis of these soundscapes, we demonstrate that exposing these entanglements between human and nuclear materialities can help us make sense of the sociocultural dimensions of living in a radioactive planet.

KW - affect theory

KW - nuclear soundscapes

KW - sonic representations

KW - ecological degradation

KW - radioactive terrains

KW - nuclear music projects

U2 - 10.25038/am.v0i25.458

DO - 10.25038/am.v0i25.458

M3 - Journal article

SP - 1

EP - 12

JO - AM Journal of Art and Media Studies

JF - AM Journal of Art and Media Studies

SN - 2217-9666

IS - 25

M1 - 458

ER -