The Fish Is in the Water and the Water Is in the Fish: Symbiosis in a Nuclear Whale Fall

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Abstract

The nuclear site of Sellafield in West Cumbria, North West England, embarks on a long period of decommissioning. Sellafield Limited (SL), the government-owned company running the site, is intent on disentangling the strong socioeconomic and affective relations with its host area with a view to making West Cumbria less dependent on SL, the area's major employer, as the company prepares for a slow withdrawal. Comparing West Cumbria to a whale fall, the habitat that comes into being around the nourishing presence of a decomposing whale carcass, I suggest that West Cumbria has feasted on Sellafield through different stages of nuclear activity, from its production of plutonium down to the long-life materiality of its nuclear legacy wastes. From this perspective on a symbiotic relationship, dependency is shown to be not a one-sided reality but a discursive tool wielded by both the industry and West Cumbrians for different strategic purposes.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCultural Anthropology
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Jun 2022

Keywords

  • nuclear decommissioning
  • Sellafield
  • dependency
  • organic metaphor
  • symbiosis
  • whale fall

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