Willkommen auf der Seite der "Textinitiative Fukushima"
Die Seiten der Textinitiative Fukushima werden derzeit von der Japanologie der Goethe-Universität betrieben. Gegenwärtiges Anliegen von TIF ist die zeitgeschichtliche Dokumentation. Das Forum dient nun in erster Linie als Archiv für Informationen zu 3/11 sowie allgemein zur Geschichte des Atomaren. Die Suchfunktion ermöglicht Recherchen zu Stichworten, Inhalten und Akteuren.
Art and Voice in the Memorialization of 3.11 (14.01.2022) | 10.01.2022 |
"10 years after the Great East Japan Earthquake (Higashi Nihon Daishinsai) or 3.11, in this presentation, we look at how artists and survivors have dealt with the aftermath of the catastrophe focusing on processes of memorialization through art and voice." "Fuyubi Nakamura will give an online tour of the exhibition “A Future for Memory: Art and Life After the Great East Japan Earthquake” she curated and which was held from February 11 to September 19, 2021 at the Museum of Anthropology at UBC, Vancouver (Canada). The second part deals with the question of voice in memorialization processes based on two student research projects. Under the supervision of Anna Wiemann, students transcribed and interpreted interviews with survivors in the small community of Minami-Sanriku (Miyagi prefecture) conducted in 2012 by students from the ‘Tōhoku kara no koe’ project and oral narrative archive lead by Prof. David Slater (Sophia University Tokyo). Dr. Fuyubi Nakamura (中村冬日) is a socio-cultural anthropologist trained at Oxford (DPhil 2006). She holds a joint position of Curator, Asia at the Museum of Anthropology (MOA) and Assistant Professor in the Department of Asian studies at the University of British Columbia (UBC). She is also Associate Member in UBC’s Department of Anthropology. Fuyubi specializes in the anthropology of art, museum studies, and material and visual culture studies. She took a leave from academia following the triple disaster in Japan in 2011 and was involved in relief and recovery activities in Miyagi Prefecture, and continues to do research about the aftermath of 3.11. Datum: 14.01.2022 10:00 Uhr – 12:00 Uhr Link: https://www.japan.uni-muenchen.de/veranstaltungen/art_and_voice/index.html |
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Zehn Jahre Fukushima. Gesundheitliche Folgen der Atomkatastrophe - Ein Resümee von Alex Rosen (IPPNW) | 29.12.2021 |
"Lehren aus der Katastrophe
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Wiederentdeckt "Das Miniatom-Projekt" - Ein Lektürehinweis | 22.12.2021 |
"(....) Der Autor im Juli 2012 nach den spektakulären Zeitungsmeldungen über die vermutliche Entdeckung des Higgs-Teilchens am Kernforschungszentrum Cern über sein Buch: 'Hier kann der neugierige Leser einen Vorgeschmack finden, wofür das vor kurzem am Cern entdeckte Higgs Teilchen gut ist. Und nicht zuletzt ein Gefühl dafür bekommen, warum es so schwierig war und mehr als 20 Jahre gedauert hat, dieses Gottesteilchen einzufangen.'" Link: https://literaturwissenschaft.de/buch/das-miniatomprojekt.html |
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Stellenausschreibung: Professur für Technik- und Umweltgeschichte (Bochum) | 17.12.2021 |
1 Universitätsprofessur (w/m/d) (W2) für Technik- und Umweltgeschichte / 1 Professorship (f/m/d) (W2 on the German Salary Scale) for the History of Technology and the Environment |
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Roboter auf Rettungsmission - Ein Bericht vom Robotereinsatz in Fukushima | 15.12.2021 |
Ein Dialog zwischen Lake Barrett und Lesley Stahl: ("Lake Barrett is a nuclear engineer and former Department of Energy official who oversaw the cleanup of the worst nuclear accident in U.S. history, Three Mile Island. He was hired as a senior adviser by TEPCO, the Tokyo Electric Power Company that owns the plant and is in charge of the effort to find the missing fuel. He's also advising on the development of new robots like this six-legged spider robot that engineers are designing to hang from scaffolding and climb onto equipment.") Lake Barrett: (...) The Little Sunfish swam thru this portal, down into this area, it went around the side. It went down through this grating, which was gone. We are standing directly underneath the reactor vessel. Molten fuel came through here and it jetted out under very high pressure. And then it came out slowly like a lava in a volcano, and it fell down and burned its way through this grating down to the floor. This is what Little Sunfish saw as technicians guided it through the pipes and hatchways of the flooded interior. It beamed back images revealing clumps of debris, fuel rods, half-destroyed equipment and murky glimpses of what looks like solidified lava -- the first signs, TEPCO officials say, of the missing fuel. Lake Barrett: These robotic steps so far have been significant steps. But it is only a small step on a very, very long journey." |
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