STS Circle at Harvard
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Shi-Lin Loh and Kyoko Sato
Harvard, EALC/Stanford STS

on
Narrating Fukushima: Scales of a Nuclear Meltdown.
Monday, September 24
12:15-2:00 p.m.
Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street, Room 100F

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Thursday, September 20.

Abstract: The nuclear meltdowns at Fukushima in the spring of 2011, according 
to countless media and government analyses, were a failure of Japan: collusive 
ties between regulators and industry prevented proper enforcement, the nation’s 
nuclear engineers embodied a culture of hubris, and the state prevented the 
media from raising critical perspectives. This analysis is usefully understood 
as a narrative. Like all narratives, it reveals certain issues and masks 
others. One of the limitations of the “failure of Japan” narrative is that its 
national focus ignores causes and consequences at local and international 
scales. In this article, we offer a broader view of the Fukushima nuclear 
disaster by presenting a series of alternative narratives that draw out local, 
national, and international dimensions of this nuclear disaster. Casting our 
gaze beyond the dominant narrative allows us to direct attention to actors and 
issues often overlooked, such as Cold War politics, international flows of 
knowledge and materials, global consumers, nation-building, villagers in Okuma 
and Futaba, and laborers at the Fukushima plant. In particular, we highlight 
several significant ways in which narratives at different scales intersect, 
overlap, and reinforce each other. To make sense of the complex forces that 
brought about the nuclear meltdowns and myriad impacts they will have, we need 
more stories, not less.

Biography: Shi-Lin Loh is a PhD candidate in the joint program between the 
department of History and the department of East Asian Languages and 
Civilizations at Harvard University. She specializes in modern (nineteenth and 
twentieth-century) Japanese and Chinese history, with a particular interest in 
commemorations and contestations of the Asia-Pacific War in both societies. She 
is currently working on a dissertation prospectus about the cultural impact of 
nuclear science in Japan both before and after Hiroshima.

Dr. Kyoko Sato is the Associate Director of the Program in Science, Technology 
and Society at Stanford University. Her research explores how cultural 
meanings, politics, and institutional frameworks intersect in the development 
of technology and knowledge production. She is currently completing a book 
manuscript,The Making of Genetically Modified Food: Culture, Politics and 
Policy in France, Japan and the United States, and conducting a study that 
examines cultural politics of nuclear energy before and after the 2011 
Fukushima disaster in Japan and the United States. She is also part of the 
research project on the workings of interdisciplinary collaboration in 
high-status research networks (with Michèle Lamont and Veronica Boix-Mansilla 
at Harvard). Dr. Sato received her PhD in sociology from Princeton University, 
MA in journalism from New York University, and BA in English from the 
University of Tokyo. She was a postdoctoral associate at Cornell University and 
a lecturer at Harvard.




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http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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