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Fallout: A Historian Reflects on America's Half-Century Encounter with Nuclear Weapons (1998)

by Paul Boyer

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2011,101,430 (3.5)None
"Fallout offers the reflections and observations of historian Paul Boyer on the fascinating and complex impact of the bomb in American life from the special perspective of a person who experienced and participated in the events and movements about which he writes. Boyer provides us with a rich understanding of nuclear reality in American thought and culture after 1945." "The essays range widely, from a discussion of the shattering impact of the news of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on a war-weary nation in 1945 to ruminations on the 1995 Enola Gay controversy, when a proposed fiftieth-anniversary commemorative exhibit on the atomic bombing of Japan at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History generated bitter controversy."--Jacket.… (more)
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...a huge slice of American life over the past half-century ... described with wonderful lucidity and, what is even more important, an unfailingly perceptive instinct for their significance in the lives and thoughts of ordinary Americans.... Everyone, most particularly younger generations for whom the nuclear events of the past half-century are remote abstractions, should read this book.
In a fine closing essay, Boyer draws on the controversy over the 1995 Enola Gay exhibit at the Smithsonian to suggest the still unsettled and unsettling position that Hiroshima and Nagasaki hold in our national psyche. The author's organization and presentation of his diverse material is skillful as always, making this informative, engaging and perhaps most important for Boyer, provocative.
  CollegeReading | Apr 2, 2008 |
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THE COLD WAR is OVER; the nuclear arms race, at least in its most sinister form, is rapidly passing into history.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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"Fallout offers the reflections and observations of historian Paul Boyer on the fascinating and complex impact of the bomb in American life from the special perspective of a person who experienced and participated in the events and movements about which he writes. Boyer provides us with a rich understanding of nuclear reality in American thought and culture after 1945." "The essays range widely, from a discussion of the shattering impact of the news of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on a war-weary nation in 1945 to ruminations on the 1995 Enola Gay controversy, when a proposed fiftieth-anniversary commemorative exhibit on the atomic bombing of Japan at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History generated bitter controversy."--Jacket.

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