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Nuclear Borderlands: The Manhattan Project in Post-Cold War New Mexico [Hardback]

4.39/5 (72 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 432 pages, height x width: 235x152 mm, weight: 765 g, 54 halftones. 21 line illus.
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Apr-2006
  • Izdevniecība: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691120765
  • ISBN-13: 9780691120768
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Hardback, 432 pages, height x width: 235x152 mm, weight: 765 g, 54 halftones. 21 line illus.
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Apr-2006
  • Izdevniecība: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691120765
  • ISBN-13: 9780691120768
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The Nuclear Borderlands explores the sociocultural fallout of twentieth-century America's premier technoscientific project--the atomic bomb. Joseph Masco offers the first anthropological study of the long-term consequences of the Manhattan Project for the people that live in and around Los Alamos, New Mexico, where the first atomic bomb, and the majority of weapons in the current U.S. nuclear arsenal, were designed. Masco examines how diverse groups--weapons scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory, neighboring Pueblo Indian Nations and Nuevomexicano communities, and antinuclear activists--have engaged the U.S. nuclear weapons project in the post-Cold War period, mobilizing to debate and redefine what constitutes "national security." In a pathbreaking ethnographic analysis, Masco argues that the U.S. focus on potential nuclear apocalypse during the Cold War obscured the broader effects of the nuclear complex on American society. The atomic bomb, he demonstrates, is not just the engine of American technoscientific modernity; it has produced a new cognitive orientation toward everyday life, provoking cross-cultural experiences of what Masco calls a "nuclear uncanny." Revealing how the bomb has reconfigured concepts of time, nature, race, and citizenship, the book provides new theoretical perspectives on the origin and logic of U.S. national security culture. The Nuclear Borderlands ultimately assesses the efforts of the nuclear security state to reinvent itself in a post-Cold War world, and in so doing exposes the nuclear logic supporting the twenty-first-century U.S. war on terrorism.

Recenzijas

Masco's important and impressive study ably demonstrates that nuclear weapons need not be detonated to have profound effects--effects that extend far beyond the well-studied realms of politics and international relations. -- David Kaiser American Scientist Masco seems to have taken to heart the tension between anthropology and science studies: on the one hand science studies too often fails in its understanding of what long-term intensive fieldwork can do; on the other anthropology too often fails to get directly into the heart of science and technology the way it always has language, spirituality, and economy. Masco's book is fusion (that impossible goal of our nuclear culture) of the best kind. -- Christopher Kelty Savage Minds

Papildus informācija

Winner of Society for Social Studies of Science: Rachel Carson Prize 2008 and American Sociological Association Science, Knowledge & Technology Section Robert K. Merton Award 2006. Runner-up for American Culture Association: John G Cawelti Award 2007.The Nuclear Borderlands alters the meaning of 'ethnography' in a way that will challenge all of us in anthropology. It will certainly take its place among the classic texts assessing the cultural politics of the bomb, and it will join the must-read ranks in the literature on American nationalism and nation-making in the late twentieth century. -- Susan Harding, University of California, Santa Cruz, author of "The Book of Jerry Falwell" and "Remaking Ibieca" No account of the post Cold War environment can afford to ignore this study and the tangle of economic, political, and cultural rights, interests, and imperatives it maps. Joe Masco pushes the ethnographic agenda firmly forward into an ambivalent twenty-first century, where Los Alamos is both dangerous polluter and lifeline employer, where rival eco-cultures, ethnicities, and social hierarchies fight over control of nature, and where the technological future can exacerbate or redeem the nuclear past. Neither antinuclear environmentalists, nor Native Americans, nor Nuevomexicanos, nor the Los Alamos scientists, nor the Washington politicians have a monopoly on the answers, and Masco shows us why. -- Michael M. J. Fischer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, author of "Emergent Forms of Life and the Anthropological Voice" Joseph Masco's argument that nuclear weapons are no longer a technology subject to scientific challenge but rather exist primarily as powerful cultural constructs takes us a long way toward understanding post-Cold War continuities in U.S. security strategies, as well as some of the astounding aspects of American exceptionalism in international politics. -- John Borneman, Princeton University
List of Illustrations
vii
Acknowledgments xi
The Enlightened Earth
1(40)
The Nuclear State of Emergency
5(13)
Radioactive Nation-building
18(9)
The Nuclear Uncanny
27(8)
``A Multidimensional, Nonlinear, Complex System''
35(6)
PART I EVERYDAY LIFE IN THE PLUTONIUM ECONOMY
41(220)
Nuclear Technoaesthetics: The Sensory Politics of the Bomb in Los Alamos
43(56)
The Bomb's Future
46(9)
Above-ground Testing (1945--1962): Tactility and the Nuclear Sublime
55(13)
Underground Testing (1963--1992): Embracing Complexity, Fetishizing Production
68(10)
Science-Based Stockpile Stewardship (1995--2010): Virtual Bombs and Prosthetic Senses
78(18)
Of Bombs and Bodies in the Plutonium Economy
96(3)
Econationalisms: First Nations in the Plutonium Economy
99(61)
Ecologies of Place
101(11)
The New World: 1942/1992
112(7)
Mirrors and Appropriations: The Secret Societies of the Pajarito Plateau
119(13)
Explosive Testing
132(12)
Nuclear Nations: The Sovereignty of Nuclear Waste
144(12)
Econationalisms in the Plutonium Economy
156(4)
Radioactive Nation-Building in Northern New Mexico: A Nuclear Maquiladora?
160(55)
Radioactive Death Trucks
162(17)
On Invasion and Illegitimacy
179(18)
LANL: A Nuclear Maquiladora?
197(16)
Nuevomexicano Futures in the Plutonium Economy
213(2)
Backtalking to the National Fetish: The Rise of Antinuclear Activism in Santa Fe
215(46)
The Post-Cold War Moment
219(9)
The Psychic Toxicity of Plutonium
228(9)
Anti-antinuclear Activists
237(7)
What Is a ``New'' Nuclear Weapon?
244(12)
Los Alamos: Ground Zero of the Peace Movement
256(5)
PART II NATIONAL INSECURITIES
261(78)
Lie Detectors: On Secrects and Hypersecurity in Los Alamos
263(26)
What Is a Nuclear Secret?
265(7)
On Racial Profiling
272(6)
Hypersecurity Measures
278(5)
The ``New Normal''
283(6)
Mutant Ecologies: Radioactive Life in Post-Cold War New Mexico
289(39)
Of Men and Ants
293(9)
Nuclear Test Subjects
302(9)
The Wildlife/Sacrifice Zone
311(5)
Environmental Sentinels, or the Militarization of the Honey Bee
316(8)
The Social Logics of Mutation
324(4)
Epilogue: The Nuclear Borderlands
328(11)
Notes 339(36)
References 375(38)
Index 413


Joseph Masco is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago.