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The multiple temporalities of infrastructure: Atomic cities and the memory of lost futures

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posted on 2025-08-01, 12:27 authored by L Dawney
Nuclear power plants, with their promise of boundless cheap energy, are archetypal figures of progress modernity. As we acknowledge the limits of industrial progress and growth-based capital, places for where the dream is now over, and whose inhabitants are finding ways of living through its transition, offer emergent practical ontologies based on maintenance, bricolage and necessity. Through the case study of the atomic city of Visaginas, Lithuania, this paper addresses the question of how to account for forms of life that emerge in the aftermath of high modernity. Here, infrastructures operate as residual cultural and material resources for practical ontologies and world building after progress. Building on emerging scholarship on the political aesthetics of infrastructure, I suggest that their ontological transition involves what Fisher describes as the ‘memory of lost futures’, a future anterior that, through the remains of material connections, technocultures and cultural memory, provide limits and conditions for emergent ways of living ‘after progress.’

Funding

AH/K006045/1

Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)

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© The Author(s) 2021. Open access. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage)

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from SAGE via the DOI in this record

Journal

Environment and Planning D: Society and Space

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SAGE Publications

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  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2021-06-07T10:38:47Z

FOA date

2021-06-07T12:00:34Z

Citation

Vol. 39 (3), pp. 405 - 422

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  • Archive

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