Containment: A Film about the Nuclear Landscape Now and for the Next 10,000 Years

August 1st, 2013 - July 31st, 2015 | PROJECT

This feature documentary will join film to humanities scholarship in investigating the historical production of nuclear waste, the present character of communities living with that waste, and the combined efforts of sociologists, anthropologists, writers, and scientists to imagine how to guard this material into the 10,000-year future. Drawing on important work in environmental (land) history, ethics, and politics, as well as work on the cultural anthropology of the nuclear world, the film “Containment” examines how the Cold War transformed the American landscape, how nuclear waste compels us today—in lands across the United States and beyond—to examine our most basic views about the control and ethics of land use, and how 24,000-year half-life of plutonium pushed scientists and humanists into the Congressionally-demanded business of imagining a ten-thousand year human future in order to mark and isolate nuclear waste.

Project Website(s)

(no project website provided)

Team Members

Peter Galison, Principal Investigator, Harvard University

Funders

Funding Source: NEH
Award Number: TR-50485-13
Funding Amount: 150000

Tags

Audience: General Public | Scientists
Discipline: Ecology | forestry | agriculture | Education and learning science | General STEM | History | policy | law | Social science and psychology | Technology
Resource Type: Project Descriptions
Environment Type: Broadcast Media | Media and Technology