"After the well-known disaster in 1986 the Exclusion Zone around Chernobyl became a prohibited area, the ground there is still severely contaminated. And yet for some 140 Samosely or self-settlers, this is their permanent residence, and more than 2,000 people are still working in and around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
Why do people want to live here? How strong is the attraction to the home ground, in spite of heavy contamination? How do you live in a community that ceases to exist? After all, when the last soul dies, the Exclusion Zone will be uninhabited forever.
Photographer Esther Hessing and writer Sophieke Thurmer visited the Exclusion Zone and ‘city of the future’ Slavutych several times to capture the firsthand stories of power, perseverance, hope and solidarity.
The social focus of Hessing and Thurmer distinguishes the book from other books published on the Chernobyl area now 30 years after the disaster." (...)
About the book
'Bound to the Ground' consists of three sections.
In the 1st section the reader enters the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone and meets the self-settlers who live there and grow their crops on the contaminated land. The 2nd section of the book looks back on the disaster and the abandoned city Pripyat with a text of Alexander Münninghoff. The last, 3rd section is about the new ‘city of the future’ Slavutych and the people that still work in the nuclear reactor every day. (publisher's note)
About the photographer (*1970):
Esther Hessing is a Dutch photographer best known for her social landscapes. To preserve stories about people’s lives in specific places and circumstances is the main reason for her being a photographer.
By photographing from a distant viewpoint she aims to convey stories in full context.
The carefully chosen compositions are an important feature of her work. She graduated Cum Laude from the Photo Academy in Rotterdam.
Why do people want to live here? How strong is the attraction to the home ground, in spite of heavy contamination? How do you live in a community that ceases to exist? After all, when the last soul dies, the Exclusion Zone will be uninhabited forever.
Photographer Esther Hessing and writer Sophieke Thurmer visited the Exclusion Zone and ‘city of the future’ Slavutych several times to capture the firsthand stories of power, perseverance, hope and solidarity.
The social focus of Hessing and Thurmer distinguishes the book from other books published on the Chernobyl area now 30 years after the disaster." (...)
About the book
'Bound to the Ground' consists of three sections.
In the 1st section the reader enters the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone and meets the self-settlers who live there and grow their crops on the contaminated land. The 2nd section of the book looks back on the disaster and the abandoned city Pripyat with a text of Alexander Münninghoff. The last, 3rd section is about the new ‘city of the future’ Slavutych and the people that still work in the nuclear reactor every day. (publisher's note)
About the photographer (*1970):
Esther Hessing is a Dutch photographer best known for her social landscapes. To preserve stories about people’s lives in specific places and circumstances is the main reason for her being a photographer.
By photographing from a distant viewpoint she aims to convey stories in full context.
The carefully chosen compositions are an important feature of her work. She graduated Cum Laude from the Photo Academy in Rotterdam.
- Ed(s)/Author(s)
- Sophieke Thurmer
- Book design
- Rob VAN HOESEL & Carel FRANSEN
- Format
- Pb. (no dust jacket, as issued), 23,5 x 31 x 1,5 cm., 136 color ills., English / Dutch, Ltd. to 600 copies