Workers dig the 5km-long Onkalo nuclear waste tunnels in Finland.
Thank you Tapio Litmanen for such an in-depth introduction to Northern European energy policy and consumption. I enjoyed seeing the varied social reception of nuclear energy in Finnland over the years, and how actions and policy don't necessarily reflect peoples' perceptions.
With nuclear energy development being a fairly young science, I found it bold to predict that storing nuclear waste in sealed underground tunnels would be fine for hundreds of thousands of years... Educated guesses?
As usual our class discussion raised some great questions Tapio recommended Bob Johnson's book Romancing the Atom for another perspective on the topic.
I haven't read the book but it comes with access to "extras" such as discussion questions and assignments. Below are some of the discussion questions.
I've highlighted a few that got me thinking, considering, analyzing...
Indigenous perspectives? Frenzies? Personal investments/decisions/responsibilities? Health impacts? ....
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
- How has RTA affected your views of science, medicine, the military, the government?
- Did Katherine Schaub “die for science,” as she suggested in her interview shortly before her death? Of what other people in RTA might we also ask this question?
- Did RTA bring back memories for you of the history of atomic development? Which of these memories most surprised you? That is, were you surprised that you had forgotten them?
- Have you or someone you know been affected directly by moments in atomic development?
- What do you or they remember from these personal experiences? Have these memories been revived from reading RTA?
- Consider the 1951 photograph of the men sitting in Adirondack chairs observing an atomic exploration in the Marshall Islands. What “story” does that picture tell you? Is it a vision of “romance” with the atom? How?
- Is it possible to “change our modes of thinking” as Albert Einstein suggested? What would this entail? Where might you as an individual begin in such a “change” of thinking modalities?
- What does RTA bring to mind regarding various environmental issues? Is, for instance, nuclear power a viable alternative to solar and wind power? Why, why not?
- What connections can you make between the “promise” of nuclear energy and, say, the “promise” of deep water oil exploration? Are there similarities/differences?
- By pondering the quotes in support of nuclear power development in Chapter 10, who has the most to gain by investments in nuclear power development? Who might lose?
- If a nuclear power plant is proposed for construction in your regional area, what would your reaction be? What actions might you take?
- What specific events immediately come to mind regarding indigenous peoples from your reading of RTA? Why does that moment come so readily to mind?
- What powers do indigenous peoples have with regard to atomic development?
- How would you characterize the conversation that often takes place when members of an indigenous culture express to others outside their group a distrust of atomic science, military uses of atomic energy, or any other aspect of atomic development?
- If you are diagnosed with a potential health problem, and the doctors tell you they want to immediately conduct a Cat Scan, an MRI, or X-ray, what might you ask before you agree to the procedure?
- We live in moments of “frenzy” such as the uranium frenzy of the 1950s. In the present day, it might be argued that the rush to embrace digital technologies is a frenzy. Do you think this is the case? Are there similar characteristics in these moments of frenzy, or other historical moments of frenzy (oil, timber, gold, etc.) that we have witnessed?
- What do the events surrounding the Fukushima disaster tell us about the atomic mindset? Do those events reinforce any of the arguments concerning the atomic mindset as put forth in this book?
- How have the 2011 events in Japan affected your perception of the “green enthymeme?” How might you think these events have affected the many people quoted in Chapter 9 who argue for nuclear power prior to 2011?
THanks for posting the discussion questions! All of which would be excellent starts to group projects and or final papers.
ReplyDeleteI think that "romancing the atom" will be a must-read for future WRD courses.