The Nuclear Borderlands: The Manhattan Project in Post-Cold War New Mexico |  | Author: Joseph Masco Publisher: Princeton University Press Category: Book
List Price: $28.95 Buy New: $23.24 as of 3/11/2010 23:14 WIT details You Save: $5.71 (20%)
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Media: Paperback Edition: illustrated edition Pages: 438 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6 x 1.1
ISBN: 0691120773 Dewey Decimal Number: 623.451190973 EAN: 9780691120775
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Product Description
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.
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| Customer Reviews: Academic but mind-blowing September 29, 2009 Eric P. Perramond (Colorado Springs, CO, USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I've read Masco's book twice now, and keep finding insights throughout it. This is not a straightforward narrative history of "how the bomb was developed." If you want such a book, there are hundreds out there. It is admittedly more academic in treatment, language (jargon), and scope than other books -- but I love the analogies, metaphors, and analysis that Joseph Masco brings to bear on the bomb (and I love alliteration).
Along with Jake Kosek's "Understories" (Duke U Press), I'll be using this book next time I teach the Political Ecology of the Southwest. If you are an anthropologist, or just play one on weekends, and have any interest in what the atomic age has meant for the nation-state of the U.S., I urge you to read this book. Yesterday.
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