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Nuclear Decolonization: Indigenous Resistance to High-Level Nuclear Waste Siting (New Directions in Rhetoric and Materiality)

Nuclear Decolonization: Indigenous Resistance to High-Level Nuclear Waste Siting (New Directions in Rhetoric and Materiality)

Current price: $129.95
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Publication Date: November 8th, 2023
Publisher:
Ohio State University Press
ISBN:
9780814215562
Pages:
236

Description

While research demonstrates how Indigenous populations have been disproportionately affected by the global nuclear production complex, less attention has been given to tactics that have successfully resisted such projects. Danielle Endres’s Nuclear Decolonization shifts the conversation around nuclear colonialism in important ways, offering an account of how the Western Shoshone, Southern Paiute, and Skull Valley Goshute peoples and nations prevented two high-level nuclear waste sites from being built on their lands. 

Using a decolonial approach, Endres highlights two sets of rhetorical tactics—Indigenous Lands rhetorics and national interest rhetorics—used to fight nuclear colonialism. The book reframes nuclear decolonization as fundamentally a struggle for the return of Indigenous lands while also revealing how Native activists selectively move between Indigenous nationhood and US citizenship in order to resist settler decision-making. Working at the intersection of Indigenous antinuclear advocacy, Indigenized environmental justice, and decolonization, Nuclear Decolonization centers Native activism and voices while amplifying the power and resilience of Indigenous peoples and nations. 

About the Author

Danielle Endres is Professor of Communication and Director of the Environmental Humanities Program at the University of Utah. She is the author of Participatory Critical Rhetoric: Theoretical and Methodological Foundations of Studying Rhetoric in Situ.

Praise for Nuclear Decolonization: Indigenous Resistance to High-Level Nuclear Waste Siting (New Directions in Rhetoric and Materiality)

“Endres’s book is a high-water mark of decolonial work in the field of rhetorical studies and critical-cultural studies in communication. It is a primer on the terms of decolonization, theories of decoloniality, and ways to study these concepts through responsible attention to Indigenous voices, providing inroads to unsettling Western perspectives and anchoring Indigenous scholarship.” —Jason Edward Black, coauthor of Mascot Nation: The Controversy over Native American Representations in Sports

“Based on years of encounters with communities and individuals, Nuclear Decolonization is an exemplar of both localized case studies and broader critiques of racism, nuclearism, and colonialism—all while demonstrating care and respect for subject matter, people, and culture.” —Stephen Depoe, coeditor of Breaking Boundaries: Innovative Practices in Environmental Communication and Public Participation