Bhopal's Ecological Gothic

Disaster, Precarity, and the Biopolitical Uncanny

By (author) Pramod K. Nayar

Hardback - £81.00

Publication date:

22 November 2017

Length of book:

182 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

237x161mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498540452

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.

Pramod K. Nayar’s book, Bhopal’s Ecological Gothic: Disaster, Precarity, and the Biopolitical Uncanny, offers a significant expansion of that limited cultural archive. Nayar engages a large textual corpus that includes fiction, drama, documentary and dramatic film, eye-witness accounts, photography, and Bhopali acts of political protest. . . . If much of ecohorror articulates environmental anxieties and fears in a cautionary mode of potential catastrophe, Nayar offers an important corrective, locating the ecological Gothic in a recent past and ongoing present. Bhopal’s Ecological Gothic will be of interest to researchers in postcolonial, environmental, disability, and disaster studies, and will likely spur further examinations into its textual sources.