Svetlana Alexievich is Belarus’ only Nobel Laureate – but the exiled journalist’s work is suppressed within her own country.
The memories of those who survived Chernobyl were collected in the book Voices from Chernobyl: The Oral History of the Nuclear Disaster by... 'Voices From Chernobyl': Survivors' Stories Twenty years ...
How do you tell a story when words themselves fail to convey the horror of what truly happened? How do you portray a catastrophe so enormous that it just seems far too big for human comprehension? How ...
The Chernobyl Museum in Kiev, Ukraine, has a maxim: There is a limit to sadness. There is no limit to trouble. USA TODAY recently published a dozen stories about the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, which ...
After its release in 2019, ‘Chernobyl‘ immediately became one of the most talked-about shows of the year. Its brutally honest portrayal of the 1986 nuclear disaster earned widespread critical acclaim.
Svetlana Alexievich won the Nobel Prize in Literature this week. One of her best-known works is a book called Voices from Chernobyl. Survivors Recount Meltdown In Nobel Winner's Chronicle Of Chernobyl ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Some historical events are so catastrophic they resist comprehension. And yet they compel us to try to understand them, again and ...
A viral photograph on Reddit claimed to show one of the first photographs taken at Chernobyl after the explosion of the nuclear reactor in Ukraine on April 26, 1986. The post claimed it was shot 14 ...
The fundamental lesson of any tragedy that claims to teach something is simple: build a mechanism that prevents repetition. Yet history rarely behaves like a controlled experiment. It loops, mutates, ...