Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Atomic aesthetics: gender, visualization and popular culture in Egypt

Taha, Hebatalla LU (2022) In International Affairs 98(4). p.1169-1187
Abstract
How was the atomic age visualized in Egypt in the years immediately after the creation of the bomb? What role did gendered images, symbols and metaphors play in narrating and normalizing nuclear technology? How can these help us understand nuclear policy today? This article engages visual and textual media, including satirical magazines, cultural journals and film. It presents a plurality of images: the depiction of the bomb as an egg, as a miniscule and aesthetically pleasing object, alongside more alarming illustrations of the bomb as a monster. Through fluid and unstable visualizations, nationalist modernizers highlighted the ambivalence of nuclear technology, seen as containing potential for postcolonial rebirth and global death... (More)
How was the atomic age visualized in Egypt in the years immediately after the creation of the bomb? What role did gendered images, symbols and metaphors play in narrating and normalizing nuclear technology? How can these help us understand nuclear policy today? This article engages visual and textual media, including satirical magazines, cultural journals and film. It presents a plurality of images: the depiction of the bomb as an egg, as a miniscule and aesthetically pleasing object, alongside more alarming illustrations of the bomb as a monster. Through fluid and unstable visualizations, nationalist modernizers highlighted the ambivalence of nuclear technology, seen as containing potential for postcolonial rebirth and global death simultaneously. By exploring nuclear imaginaries from the decolonizing world, the article challenges the dominant narratives, histories and aesthetics of the atomic age. Despite the continuous reiteration of nuclear weapons as masculine in feminist International Relations, this conceptualization is not necessarily universal, and this research illustrates that feminizing nuclear imagery can still reinforce the nuclearized world. Considering visualization from, and not only of, the global South, the article emphasizes that people in non-nuclear weapons-possessing states also participated in the production of the nuclear-armed world and in discussions on the nuclear condition. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
International Affairs
volume
98
issue
4
pages
1169 - 1187
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85134394205
ISSN
0020-5850
DOI
10.1093/ia/iiac115
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
29409e8a-d956-4403-a5f7-7c52283a8550
date added to LUP
2024-01-15 06:57:14
date last changed
2025-04-04 15:13:11
@article{29409e8a-d956-4403-a5f7-7c52283a8550,
  abstract     = {{How was the atomic age visualized in Egypt in the years immediately after the creation of the bomb? What role did gendered images, symbols and metaphors play in narrating and normalizing nuclear technology? How can these help us understand nuclear policy today? This article engages visual and textual media, including satirical magazines, cultural journals and film. It presents a plurality of images: the depiction of the bomb as an egg, as a miniscule and aesthetically pleasing object, alongside more alarming illustrations of the bomb as a monster. Through fluid and unstable visualizations, nationalist modernizers highlighted the ambivalence of nuclear technology, seen as containing potential for postcolonial rebirth and global death simultaneously. By exploring nuclear imaginaries from the decolonizing world, the article challenges the dominant narratives, histories and aesthetics of the atomic age. Despite the continuous reiteration of nuclear weapons as masculine in feminist International Relations, this conceptualization is not necessarily universal, and this research illustrates that feminizing nuclear imagery can still reinforce the nuclearized world. Considering visualization from, and not only of, the global South, the article emphasizes that people in non-nuclear weapons-possessing states also participated in the production of the nuclear-armed world and in discussions on the nuclear condition.}},
  author       = {{Taha, Hebatalla}},
  issn         = {{0020-5850}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{1169--1187}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{International Affairs}},
  title        = {{Atomic aesthetics: gender, visualization and popular culture in Egypt}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiac115}},
  doi          = {{10.1093/ia/iiac115}},
  volume       = {{98}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}