Description

Book Synopsis
"We choose to go to the Moon, not because it is easy but because it is hard." President John F. Kennedy's words spoke of an American enterprise that rivalled, and echoed, that of the discovery and settling of his own country a century before. At the height of the Cold War between America and Russia, hundreds of spacecraft, both manned and robotic, travelled into outer space - the New Frontier. They sent back awe-inspiring images and sounds from Earth orbit, the Moon, and the planets of Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Venus; they also overturned our preconceptions about our own planet. "Live from the Moon" is the exploratory story of this remarkable cultural and political phenomenon. Expert and enthusiast Mike Allen examines these images sent back from space, their use as propaganda, their value as drama and entertainment, and their spiritual role in shaping humanity's changing view of itself across the second half of the twentieth century. He looks at the complex relationship between space exploration, film and television during these decades to show the synergy between them in pushing forward the frontiers not only of our knowledge of the Universe, but of our need to visualise the furthest reaches of our imaginations in order to fully know what it is to be human.

Trade Review
'A fascinating, comprehensive and lively account of how we got those history-changing pictures. Allen takes us behind closed doors to reveal what even those of us involved at the time never knew. A must read.' - James Burke

Table of Contents
Introduction 1. Imagining Spaceflight 2. NASA-wood U.S.A. 3. All Around the World: the Development of Earth-orbiting Satellites 4. To Robotically Go Where No Man Had Gone Before: Interplanetary Satellites and Probes 5. Heroes and Ideologies: Mercury and Vostok 6. Upping the Orbital Ante: Gemini and Voskhod 7. "In the Lovely Apollo Room, High Atop Everything": Apollos 7-10 8. One Small Step for Man, One Giant Leap for Propaganda: Apollo 11 9. Failure Was Not an Option...But Almost a Reality: Apollos 12-14 10. Celestial Geologists: Serious Science and Public Complacency - the Final Apollo missions Coda: Hands Across the Globe - The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. Endnote: Some of Our Apollo 11 Footage in Missing?

Live from the Moon: Film, Television and the Space Race

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    A Paperback by Michael Allen

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      View other formats and editions of Live from the Moon: Film, Television and the Space Race by Michael Allen

      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
      Publication Date: 17/06/2009
      ISBN13: 9781845111700, 978-1845111700
      ISBN10: 1845111702
      Also in:
      Space science

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      "We choose to go to the Moon, not because it is easy but because it is hard." President John F. Kennedy's words spoke of an American enterprise that rivalled, and echoed, that of the discovery and settling of his own country a century before. At the height of the Cold War between America and Russia, hundreds of spacecraft, both manned and robotic, travelled into outer space - the New Frontier. They sent back awe-inspiring images and sounds from Earth orbit, the Moon, and the planets of Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Venus; they also overturned our preconceptions about our own planet. "Live from the Moon" is the exploratory story of this remarkable cultural and political phenomenon. Expert and enthusiast Mike Allen examines these images sent back from space, their use as propaganda, their value as drama and entertainment, and their spiritual role in shaping humanity's changing view of itself across the second half of the twentieth century. He looks at the complex relationship between space exploration, film and television during these decades to show the synergy between them in pushing forward the frontiers not only of our knowledge of the Universe, but of our need to visualise the furthest reaches of our imaginations in order to fully know what it is to be human.

      Trade Review
      'A fascinating, comprehensive and lively account of how we got those history-changing pictures. Allen takes us behind closed doors to reveal what even those of us involved at the time never knew. A must read.' - James Burke

      Table of Contents
      Introduction 1. Imagining Spaceflight 2. NASA-wood U.S.A. 3. All Around the World: the Development of Earth-orbiting Satellites 4. To Robotically Go Where No Man Had Gone Before: Interplanetary Satellites and Probes 5. Heroes and Ideologies: Mercury and Vostok 6. Upping the Orbital Ante: Gemini and Voskhod 7. "In the Lovely Apollo Room, High Atop Everything": Apollos 7-10 8. One Small Step for Man, One Giant Leap for Propaganda: Apollo 11 9. Failure Was Not an Option...But Almost a Reality: Apollos 12-14 10. Celestial Geologists: Serious Science and Public Complacency - the Final Apollo missions Coda: Hands Across the Globe - The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. Endnote: Some of Our Apollo 11 Footage in Missing?

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