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Publisher Note

Gerd Ludwig ventured repeatedly documenting the destroyed rector #4, which disappeared under a new Safe Confinement for at least 100 years. Bordering the site of the worst nuclear disaster to date, the abandoned city of Pripyat might face a similar destiny as authorities decide what to do with it.

“As engaged photographers,” says Ludwig, “we often report about human tragedies in the face of disaster, and take our cameras to uncharted areas with the understanding that our explorations are not without personal risk. We do this out of a deep commitment to important stories told on behalf of otherwise voiceless victims.”

The Victims: at the core of Ludwig’s photographs are the people who continue to suffer this tragedy – they exposed their suffering in the hope of preventing future tragedies like Chernobyl.
Pripyat: The crumbling city Pripyat is marked by post-apocalyptic scenes of abandonment – trees growing through streets, schools rotting, and apartment buildings littered with the personal belongings left behind by those who hastily fled their homes in fear.
The Zone: In the Exclusion Zone, elderly returnees came back to live out their lives on their own soil, despite the radioactive contamination.

Redacted CIA documents, a map, detailed captions, a personal essay by Gerd Ludwig, and additional resources give readers in-depth information about the Chernobyl disaster.
An essay by Nobel Peace Prize laureate and former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev provides historical context, and quotes from the book Voices from Chernobyl, by award-winning author Svetlana Alexievich, provide first-hand accounts of the disaster,

Photobook

The Long Shadow of Chernobyl

by Gerd Ludwig

Publisher
Release Place Baden, Switzerland
Edition 1st edition
Release Date 2014
Credits
Artist: Gerd Ludwig
Identifiers
ISBN-13: 9783901753664
Work  
Topics Nuclear, Nuclear Disaster
Language English, German, French
Format Hardcover
Dimensions 31.0 × 29.0 cm
Pages 254