Uranium and Religion: Toward a Decolonial Temporality of Extraction
Abstract
:1. Colonial Legacies of Uranium Extraction
Before the colonial project could prosper, it had to render territories and peoples extractible, and it did so through a matrix of symbolic, physical, and representational violence. Therefore, the extractive view sees territories as commodities, rendering land as for the taking, while also devalorizing the hidden worlds that form the nexus of human and nonhuman multiplicity. This viewpoint, similar to the colonial gaze, facilitates the reorganization of territories, populations, and plant and animal life into extractible data and natural resources for material and immaterial accumulation.
2. Religion, Colonial Temporality, and Uranium Extraction
2.1. The Religious Roots of Colonial Temporality
2.2. Connecting Religion, Colonial Temporality, and Extraction
2.3. Colonial Temporalities and The Rise of the Nuclear Age
3. Rethinking Temporal Legacies of Uranium Extraction
4. Uranium Extraction and the American Nuclear Agenda
This kind of rhetoric…makes the ‘Jurassic Age’ and other geologic histories the property of the settler’s peculiar sovereignty, brought under the rubric of settler colonial space and time by virtue of what Mel Chen calls the ‘sovereign fantasy’: ‘the national or imperial project of absolute rule and authority’ over land, history, and narrative.(Voyles 2015, p. 72; citing Chen 2007)
5. Toward a Decolonial Temporality of Extraction
6. Re-Storying Uranium Extraction
6.1. Entangled Landscapes, Integrative Legacies
6.2. Transgenerational Implications
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The Atomic Heritage Foundation is a non-profit institution based in Washington, D.C., which aims to archive and preserve historical data related to the Manhattan Project and the creation of nuclear technologies. https://ahf.nuclearmuseum.org/ (accessed on 16 July 2024). |
2 | The Curies published their findings in 1898 and won the Nobel Peace Prize in Chemistry in 1911 for their work on radium (see Curie et al. 1898; for a more detailed history of the Curies’ work on radium, see Mould 1999). |
3 | For more on this history of uranium mining, including and especially in the United States, see Voyles 2015 and Johnston et al. 2010. |
4 | It is important to note, however, that uranium mining has also affected other Indigenous and Native American communities and has extended beyond the Manhattan Project well into the 21st century (see, e.g., LaDuke 2010; Shrader-Frechette 2010; World Nuclear Association 2024b). |
5 | On the notable accusations of plagiarism and academic misconduct against Churchill and the issues concerning his claims of Indigenous identity, see Endres 2009, 2023, pp. ix–x, 3 and Nichols 2021, p. 55. In line with Endres, I limit citations of Churchill in my own work but choose to include this one because of the importance of this terminology to activists and scholars. |
6 | Here, I mean Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) which has, since 1960, been the international model used by scientists and the global public to set a standard, uniform, and universal definition of time. |
7 | On time and the ways that it is discussed in relation to extraction, see e.g., Crockett 2022; Daggett 2019; Orpana 2021; Rowe 2023; and Simpson and Szeman 2021. |
8 | For a succinct overview on the connections between patriarchal worldviews and religion, see Nichols 2023. |
9 | Many of the scientists who contributed to the paper cited here were also members of the International Commission on Stratigraphy’s Working Group on the Anthropocene, which was first convened in 2009. For more details on the history of the working group, see International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) 2024. |
10 | |
11 | Joanna Macy, interview with author, 22 July 2019. Much of Macy’s own work has focused on reconceptualizing and rethinking nuclear technologies through an understanding of “deep time”. Her group work on Despair and Empowerment, for instance, now known as The Work That Reconnects, helps participants to process and come to terms with their fears and emotions related to anthropogenic climate change, the threat of nuclear war, and the long-term planetary effects of nuclear technologies (for more on Macy, see Nichols 2021). |
12 | On wonder, see Sideris 2017. On reverence and the tendency to describe environments and landscapes in religious (or religion resembling) terms, see Taylor 2010; Nichols and Bauman 2022. |
13 | Rocky Flats is one of the most contested nuclear weapons production facilities in the world and is known for its production of plutonium and the manufacture of nuclear weapons parts. Yucca Mountain was the proposed and highly contested geologic repository in the U.S. for spent nuclear fuel. The project was halted in the early 2000s due to concerns about the repository’s susceptibility to flooding and has received no federal funding since 2010 (for more on the history of Yucca Mountain, see Nichols 2025). Onkalo Island is a geologic repository in Finland expected to begin operations by 2026, contingent upon regulatory approval. If it opens, it will be the world’s first operational geologic repository for the long-term storage of spent nuclear fuel. |
14 | Arn Keeling has also demonstrated the dynamic entanglements that uranium extraction has precipitated, noting the ways that uranium “stitched together…distant markets; extensive transportation networks and processing facilities; the extensive and voracious resource demands of an industrial mining operation; regional, national and international political economies; and regional populations, ecologies and landscapes” (Keeling 2010, p. 231). |
15 | For a more detailed history of BEIR VII and for information about the disproportionate impacts of ionizing radiation, see Nichols and Olson 2024. |
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Nichols, A.M. Uranium and Religion: Toward a Decolonial Temporality of Extraction. Religions 2025, 16, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16010016
Nichols AM. Uranium and Religion: Toward a Decolonial Temporality of Extraction. Religions. 2025; 16(1):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16010016
Chicago/Turabian StyleNichols, Amanda M. 2025. "Uranium and Religion: Toward a Decolonial Temporality of Extraction" Religions 16, no. 1: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16010016
APA StyleNichols, A. M. (2025). Uranium and Religion: Toward a Decolonial Temporality of Extraction. Religions, 16(1), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16010016