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UID:3311-dc557530a943bcf3368f444c7327553c@events.la.psu.edu
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SUMMARY:WGSS Spring 2023 Speaker Series: Shiloh Krupar and Sarah Kanouse
DESCRIPTION:\n&ldquo\;A People&rsquo\;s Atlas of Nuclear Colorado&rdquo\
	;\n\nOperating in the tradition of the atlases and counter-maps develope
	d by critical and activist scholars\, &ldquo\;A People&rsquo\;s Atlas of
	\n\nNuclear Colorado&rdquo\; is a collectively authored digital project 
	documenting and interpreting the sites\, issues\, policies\, and\n\ncult
	ures associated with the American nuclear weapons complex as it enters i
	ts ninth decade. With more than forty\n\ncontributors to date\, the Atla
	s collects and cross-references many types of knowledge\, affective regi
	sters\, and forms of\n\nevidence: maps\, photographs\, and descriptions 
	of major and minor nuclear sites\; issue briefs offering historical and\
	n\npolicy contexts\; artworks responding to nuclear legacies\; and schol
	arly essays connecting Colorado&rsquo\;s specific atomic\n\nhistories to
	 broader issues concerning environmental justice\, technoscientific prac
	tice\, the formation of a nuclear\n\ncitizenry\, and the performance and
	 projection of hegemony. In this presentation\, co-editors Sarah Kanouse
	 and Shiloh\n\nKrupar position the Atlas in relation to their larger bod
	ies of work\, discuss their approach to building the social\n\ninfrastru
	ctures that created and maintain the Atlas\, and demonstrate how the exp
	erimental interface design resists at\n\nthe level of form the compartme
	ntalization and black-boxing of military and industrial nuclear discours
	es.\n\nFor more details: https://events.la.psu.edu/event/wgss-sksk_04192
	3/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><b>&ldquo;A Peo
	ple&rsquo;s Atlas of Nuclear Colorado&rdquo;</b></p><p>Operating in the 
	tradition of the atlases and counter-maps developed by critical and acti
	vist scholars, &ldquo;A People&rsquo;s Atlas of<br />Nuclear Colorado&rd
	quo; is a collectively authored digital project documenting and interpre
	ting the sites, issues, policies, and<br />cultures associated with the 
	American nuclear weapons complex as it enters its ninth decade. With mor
	e than forty<br />contributors to date, the Atlas collects and cross-ref
	erences many types of knowledge, affective registers, and forms of<br />
	evidence: maps, photographs, and descriptions of major and minor nuclear
	 sites; issue briefs offering historical and<br />policy contexts; artwo
	rks responding to nuclear legacies; and scholarly essays connecting Colo
	rado&rsquo;s specific atomic<br />histories to broader issues concerning
	 environmental justice, technoscientific practice, the formation of a nu
	clear<br />citizenry, and the performance and projection of hegemony. In
	 this presentation, co-editors Sarah Kanouse and Shiloh<br />Krupar posi
	tion the Atlas in relation to their larger bodies of work, discuss their
	 approach to building the social<br />infrastructures that created and m
	aintain the Atlas, and demonstrate how the experimental interface design
	 resists at<br />the level of form the compartmentalization and black-bo
	xing of military and industrial nuclear discourses.</p><p>For more detai
	ls: <a href='https://events.la.psu.edu/event/wgss-sksk_041923/'>https://
	events.la.psu.edu/event/wgss-sksk_041923/</a></p></body></html>
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