Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
The book studies the cultural texts-fiction, protest effigies, photographs, films, reportage, eyewitness accounts, campaign posters and reports-produced around the world's worst industrial disaster: the Bhopal tragedy of 1984. It makes a case for an ecological Gothic, wherein the city, its landscape and its people are Gothicized. After tracing the history of the disaster as a history of negligence, the book proceeds in later chapters to study the coverage of the events themselves by eyewitnesses and survivors, and the remnants, in various forms, of the disaster - the haunting - within human bodies and nature. Finally, it examines the industrial ruins and the mobilization of protests against Union Carbide.
Synopsis
The book offers a close examination of the rhetoric and discourses around the Bhopal disaster through a reading of numerous cultural texts--from fiction to protest effigies and posters - and maps the production of an ecological Gothic around the disaster.