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Introduction to the 2013 Edition: How Did They Survive?
The Unlikely Happened Again: Some Comparative Notes for the Present and Future
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Chapter 1
Life Politics after Chernobyl
Time Lapse
A Technogenic Catastrophe
Nation Building
Experimental Systems
Docta Ignorantia
The Unstoppable Course of Radiation Illness
Chapter 2
Technical Error: Measures of Life and Risk
A Foreign Burden
Saturated Grid
Institute of Biophysics, Moscow
Soviet-American Cooperation
Safe Living Politics
Life Sciences
Risk In Vivo
Chapter 3
Chernobyl in Historical Light
How to Remember Then
New City of Bila-Skala
Vitalii
Contracts of Truth
Oksana
Anna
Requiem for Storytelling
Chapter 4
Illness as Work: Human Market Transition
City of Sufferers
Capitalist Transition
Nothing to Buy and Nothing to Sell
Medical-Labor Committees
Disability Claims
Illness for Life
Chapter 5
Biological Citizenship
Remediation Models
Normalizing Catastrophe
Suffering and Medical Signs
Domestic Neurology
Disability Groups
Law, Medicine, and Corruption
Material Basis of Health
Chapter 6
Local Science and Organic Processes
Social Rebuilding
Radiation Research
Between the Lesional and the Psychosocial
New Sociality
Doctor-Patient Relations
No One Is Hiding Anything Anymore
In the Middle of the Experiment
Chapter 7
Self and Social Identity in Transition
Anton and Halia
Beyond the Family: Kvartyra and Public Voice
Medicalized Selves
Everyday Violence
Lifetime
Chapter 8
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Figures and Tables
Copyright