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20th Century American History - Cold War, Nuclear Weapons Policy, Nuclear Engineering, United States - Military Policy, Military - Weapons - Nuclear Weapons
Life Under a Cloud by Allan M. Winkler — book cover

Life Under a Cloud

by Allan M. Winkler
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Overview

By April 1952, New York City had issued two and a half million metal dogtags to all public, private, and parochial school children; the primary reason: to help identify the dead after a sneak nuclear attack. It was just another part of making Americans feel safer while living at ground zero.
In Life Under a Cloud, Allan Winkler presents a fascinating history of the irony, anxiety, and official insanity of the atomic age. He begins with the prewar search for fission, showing how the advent of war snowballed independent scientific investigation into the mammoth Manhattan Project. The first atomic bomb test was a revelation to the scientists (J. Robert Oppenheimer was moved to quote Hindu scripture: "Now I am become Death, destroyer of worlds"); but the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki sparked an atomic craze, as bars served drinks like the "Atomic Cocktail," and Life magazine dubbed a model Miss Anatomic Bomb. Winkler deftly unfolds the debate over the bomb that raged among scientists and intellectuals, even as the Cold War impelled the military to demand more and bigger bombs—culminating in the "Super," as the hydrogen bomb was nicknamed. He weaves together military strategy (as the nuclear arms establishment took on immense proportions), policymaking in the White House, and the effects of the nuclear arms race on the public. The atomic age was a gold mine for science fiction and comic books, while scientists expressed their concern in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and other publications. The hydrogen bomb tests of the 1950s brought the problem of fallout into the popular eye, creating pressure for a nuclear test ban as well as a craze for bomb shelters and civil defense. Winkler also traces the rise and fall of the civilian uses of atomic power, from Hyman Rickover's first pilot reactor to the crisis brought on by Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. He shows how the momentum of the arms race faltered in the 1970s, with the first nuclear arms limitation treaties, and follows the story up through the 1980s, as nuclear anxieties climaxed in the freeze movement and plans for the Star Wars missile defense system. Even before the collapse of the Soviet Union, he writes, public and scientific protests had begun to slow the Star Wars steamroller, marking a break with the nearly unstoppable arms-building inertia of the Cold War.
Ranging across popular culture, scientific thought, military strategy, and political history, Life Under a Cloud provides a comprehensive account of America's turbulent relationship with the atom. From the Manhattan Project through the Bush administration, it captures the gravity—and insanity—of a period that continues to haunt the post-Cold War era.

Spanning five decades, from the Manhattan Project to Chernobyl, here is a far-reaching look at how the atom shaped American life in the nuclear era. Ranging across popular culture, scientific thought, military strategy and political history, Winkler takes a fascinating look at the irony, anxiety, and official insanity of the atomic age.

About the Author, Allan M. Winkler

About the Author:
Allan M. Winkler is Professor of History at Miami University, Ohio.

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Editorials

Gilbert Taylor

Winkler takes advantage of the present pause in nuclear neuralgia to review the fluctuation of the disease from 1945 to 1985. He portrays the three principal groups involved in the nuclear debate: scientists and their journals (especially the "Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists"); military strategists and promoters of nuclear power plants; and popular artists whose novels, movies, and songs played on the issue. Since scores of books have been devoted to the personalities and minute aspects of the events they wrestled with, Winkler must operate at the outer limits of summary and synthesis, which embrace the outlines of events like Hiroshima; the construction of the H-bomb; the clamor over fallout from atmospheric testings; the fatuity of civil defense; the several arms treaties; and the recrudescence of public fears around 1980. To stretch the text over such broad subjects, the "flexible response" doctrine and Dr. Seuss get equal time, as do the Atomic Energy Commission and ban-the-bombers like SANE/Freeze. Inevitably this one-size-fits-all style smooths out or omits entirely the power factor in the nuclear dilemma (e.g., the politics of the cold war), leaving novices interested in the subject to be sympathetic with Winkler's fundamental view that it is public action and Tom Lehrer's music that, to a point, keep the U.S. authorities honest about the destructiveness of nuclear weaponry.

Book Details

Published
March 1, 1993
Publisher
New York : Oxford University Press, 1993.
Pages
212
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195078213

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