Item Description
Fukushima, as with the rest of Tohoku, was a bastion of organic, natural farming; slow, traditional Japanese culture. The shock, trauma, and continuing nuclear radiation assaults that started on 3/11 has shaken the idyllic way of life and identity of Fukushima organic farmers to the core. Now farmers, who worked to build up good, organic soil and food have undertaken the responsibility for ongoing decontamination and recovery efforts, while dealing with collective fears regarding radioactive co
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Media Type
Layer Type
Archive
Seeds
Geolocation
37.761, 140.475
Latitude
37.761
Longitude
140.475
Location
37.761,140.475
Media Creator Username
KH
Media Creator Realname
KH
Frequency
Archive Once
Scope
One Page
Language
English
Media Date Create
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English Title
Ten Thousand Things: Still "Praying for Japan" —Uncanny Terrain explores impact of 3/11 on Fukushima family farmers, animals, soil, & nuclear evacuees
English Description
Fukushima, as with the rest of Tohoku, was a bastion of organic, natural farming; slow, traditional Japanese culture. The shock, trauma, and continuing nuclear radiation assaults that started on 3/11 has shaken the idyllic way of life and identity of Fukushima organic farmers to the core. Now farmers, who worked to build up good, organic soil and food have undertaken the responsibility for ongoing decontamination and recovery efforts, while dealing with collective fears regarding radioactive co
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frequency | Once | scope | Page | email | language | English|
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URI
http://wayback.archive-it.org/2438/20110301000000/http://tenthousandthingsfromkyoto.blogspot.jp/2013/07/still-praying-for-japan-uncanny-terrain.html
Attribution URI
http://tenthousandthingsfromkyoto.blogspot.jp/2013/07/still-praying-for-japan-uncanny-terrain.html