About the Book
A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press's Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.
How does an environmental crisis become the impetus for a kind of caring that is also intense thinking? Care, Kin, Crack-Up examines Japanese literature and activist narratives to show people at their most creative when struggling to engage Gaia: earth, intrusion, life. Faced with Fukushima, how did they trace nuclear enormity along thin lines of immanence and sense? Into incorporeal cracks rather than debilitating crack-ups? Margherita Long opens environmental humanities in new feminist directions using ideas from Indigenous studies, disability studies, science and technology studies, and Deleuze. This book maps new problems, like the gendered politics of the nuclear disaster, to reframe old ones, like Japan's peace constitution, military sexual slavery, and Minamata mercury poisoning.
