Ecocritical Study of the Chornobyl Disaster (Based on Materials of Contemporary Literature of Fact)

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Date
2024
Authors
Rozinkevych, Nataliia
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Abstract
The effects of humankind during the Capitalocene period caused planetary changes that resulted in the devastation and destruction of the Earth. The nuclear tragedy at the Chornobyl NPP on April 26, 1986, should serve as a constant reminder to society as it provided an example of dysfunctional totalitarian management. The topic of Chornobyl has become socially tiresome in recent years due to the trivialization of this large-scale anthropogenic, ecological, economic, and humanitarian disaster. Theimage of Ukraine as a hazard area has gradually been replaced in world consciousness. WhenRussia, the aggressor country, started to intimidate the world with nuclear and thermonuclearweapons and to take the nuclear power plants in Ukraine under fire, the danger of radioactivematerials came up once again. Phosphorous ammunition used in Ukraine in 2022 demonstratesthat the terrorist state is capable of anything. Scientists also relate to earthquake motionsthat occurred in Turkey in February 2023 and Japan in January 2024, with the displacement ofcontinental plates of the Earth’s crust resulting from missile attacks at the surface of the Earth. In the 21st century, there was a need to reconsider and refresh memories as well as to reread the works under a new perspective to draw attention to crimes against the safety of humanity and the environment, as well as to popularize, preserve and pass historical knowledge to future generations to protect them from traumatic experiences and self-destruction. The article aims to look at the postcolonial environment in contemporary literature of fact through the spectacle of ecocritical discourse via reading the works on the Chornobyl disaster. The objects of the study are Galia Ackerman’s work “Crossing Chornobyl,” the documentary and publicist chapter “Chornobyl Scenario” from the novel “Non-format Journalism” by Hryhorii Krymchuk, Volodymyr Shovkoshytnyi’s semidocumentary short story “Chornobyl: I Saw It,” the chapter “Elon Musk, “Tesla,” and Nuclear Power Engineering” from Maks Kidruk’s popular scientific book “Theory of Improbability,” Oleksii Radynskyi’s literary report “Chornobyl Is Ukraine,” and Markiian Kamysh’s travelogue “Stalking the Atomic City.” Study methods include principles of science, objectivity, and source verification. General scientific and special scientific research methods used in the study are a descriptive method for synthesizing and systematizing selected material; comparative and typological methods involving the elements of cultural, comparative, and narrative studies to compare the ways various authors have covered the Chornobyl topic; an ecocritical method that has made it possible to apply naturecentric approach to conceptualizing interaction between a human and nature to develop eco-conscious society; a postcolonial method aimed at conceptualizing the consequences of colonial rule via non-fiction text
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Keywords
Chornobyl, ecocriticism, postcolonialism, environment, radioactivity, nuclear power engineering, article
Citation
Rozinkevych, N. Ecocritical Study of the Chornobyl Disaster (Based on Materials of Contemporary Literature of Fact) / Nataliia Rozinkevych // Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal. - 2024. - No. 11: Kant Studies in Ukraine: History and Modernity (to Kant's 300th Anniversary). - P. 204-225. - https://doi.org/10.18523/2313-4895.11.2024.204-225