Atomic structures: the architecture of nuclear nationalism in India and Pakistan

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4 Scopus citations

Abstract

A half-century after their completion, India’s Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) and the Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology (PINSTECH) stand out as unchallenged architectural advertisements for ‘nuclear nationalism’. Elsewhere, Atoms for Peace reactors made no pretence to architectural refinement. In the right hands, however, ‘Cold War Modern’ could express the hard power of the nuclear age. For India and Pakistan, these nuclear laboratory complexes became the public faces of the peaceful atom that held out the promise, and masked the peril, of the atomic age at home and abroad, and deliberately deflected attention away from clandestine nuclear weapons programmes. BARC and PINSTECH, envisioned as cornerstones for self-confident and self-reliant programmes of nuclear physics, embodied the paradox of postcolonial science, necessarily borrowing from the West but determined to break the cycle of dependency, in defiance of Western expectations.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)220-242
Number of pages23
JournalHistory and Technology
Volume31
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 3 2015

Keywords

  • Atoms for Peace
  • India
  • Pakistan
  • architecture
  • nuclear reactors
  • the cold war

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • History and Philosophy of Science

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