Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
“Within the vast scholarship on the atomic bombs the book stands out for its highly original depiction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as ‘ground zero’ for the articulation of the concept of trauma, which is applied so widely today. Historians of Japan, medicine and science and technology studies are likely to find it an enlightening and even moving read.” * British Journal for the History of Science *
“This book presents an insightful and persuasive analysis of Japanese psychiatry and the troubled experiences of atom bomb survivors. . . . Zwigenberg provides important evidence to understand why so many people, who had endured unimaginable suffering, were neglected in the post-war period.” * The Psychologist *
Nuclear Minds is a penetrating investigation into how the postwar Japanese psychological and psychiatric establishment encountered the psychic effects of nuclear trauma, exposing a long journey toward an understanding of how political trauma and war deeply effect individuals within their collective society—here, Zwigenberg offers a necessary reflection and examination extremely resonant with current events today.” * History: Reviews of New Books *
“After Hiroshima in 1945, the psychological effect of the bomb was, astonishingly, explained away as if caused by anything but the bomb. Science’s obsession with objectivity and universality, compounded by the Cold War realignment of geopolitical powers, made individual suffering of hibakusha utterly invisible. In a clear and compelling analysis, and with appealingly open prose, Zwigenberg strikingly juxtaposes and makes tangible a global web of psychological knowledge, science politics, and survivor activism before the advent of post-traumatic stress disorder.” -- Naoko Wake, Michigan State University
“A profound and illuminating journey into the psychological subjectivism experienced by the hibakusha under the Cold War psychiatric gaze. Zwigenberg shows how analyses of surviving nuclear attacks in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were embedded into existing psychological frameworks of militarized emotional harm and yet disrupted them. We see the hibakusha abandoned as suffering individuals even as their wounds were being collectively codified to prepare the world for a dystopic future.” -- Robert A. Jacobs, Hiroshima Peace Institute and Hiroshima City University

Table of Contents
Note on Language
Introduction

Part 1. Bombing Minds
Chapter 1. American Psychological Sciences and the Road to Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Chapter 2. Bombing “the Japanese Mind”: Alexander Leighton’s Hiroshima
Chapter 3. Healing a Sick World: The Nuclear Age on the Analyst’s Couch
Chapter 4. Nuclear Trauma and Panic in the United States

Part 2. Researching Minds, Healing Minds
Chapter 5. Y. Scott Matsumoto, the ABCC, and A-Bomb Social Work
Chapter 6. Konuma Masuho and the Psychiatry of the Bomb
Chapter 7. Kubo Yoshitoshi and the Psychology of Peace
Chapter 8. Social Workers, Nuclear Sociology, and the Road to PTSD
Conclusion

Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

Nuclear Minds Cold War Psychological Science and

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 29 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Ran Zwigenberg

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      View other formats and editions of Nuclear Minds Cold War Psychological Science and by Ran Zwigenberg

      Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
      Publication Date: 25/07/2023
      ISBN13: 9780226826769, 978-0226826769
      ISBN10: 0226826767

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      “Within the vast scholarship on the atomic bombs the book stands out for its highly original depiction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as ‘ground zero’ for the articulation of the concept of trauma, which is applied so widely today. Historians of Japan, medicine and science and technology studies are likely to find it an enlightening and even moving read.” * British Journal for the History of Science *
      “This book presents an insightful and persuasive analysis of Japanese psychiatry and the troubled experiences of atom bomb survivors. . . . Zwigenberg provides important evidence to understand why so many people, who had endured unimaginable suffering, were neglected in the post-war period.” * The Psychologist *
      Nuclear Minds is a penetrating investigation into how the postwar Japanese psychological and psychiatric establishment encountered the psychic effects of nuclear trauma, exposing a long journey toward an understanding of how political trauma and war deeply effect individuals within their collective society—here, Zwigenberg offers a necessary reflection and examination extremely resonant with current events today.” * History: Reviews of New Books *
      “After Hiroshima in 1945, the psychological effect of the bomb was, astonishingly, explained away as if caused by anything but the bomb. Science’s obsession with objectivity and universality, compounded by the Cold War realignment of geopolitical powers, made individual suffering of hibakusha utterly invisible. In a clear and compelling analysis, and with appealingly open prose, Zwigenberg strikingly juxtaposes and makes tangible a global web of psychological knowledge, science politics, and survivor activism before the advent of post-traumatic stress disorder.” -- Naoko Wake, Michigan State University
      “A profound and illuminating journey into the psychological subjectivism experienced by the hibakusha under the Cold War psychiatric gaze. Zwigenberg shows how analyses of surviving nuclear attacks in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were embedded into existing psychological frameworks of militarized emotional harm and yet disrupted them. We see the hibakusha abandoned as suffering individuals even as their wounds were being collectively codified to prepare the world for a dystopic future.” -- Robert A. Jacobs, Hiroshima Peace Institute and Hiroshima City University

      Table of Contents
      Note on Language
      Introduction

      Part 1. Bombing Minds
      Chapter 1. American Psychological Sciences and the Road to Hiroshima and Nagasaki
      Chapter 2. Bombing “the Japanese Mind”: Alexander Leighton’s Hiroshima
      Chapter 3. Healing a Sick World: The Nuclear Age on the Analyst’s Couch
      Chapter 4. Nuclear Trauma and Panic in the United States

      Part 2. Researching Minds, Healing Minds
      Chapter 5. Y. Scott Matsumoto, the ABCC, and A-Bomb Social Work
      Chapter 6. Konuma Masuho and the Psychiatry of the Bomb
      Chapter 7. Kubo Yoshitoshi and the Psychology of Peace
      Chapter 8. Social Workers, Nuclear Sociology, and the Road to PTSD
      Conclusion

      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      Index

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