Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Foreword: Postwar America’s Nuclear Paradox / Paul S. Sutter
Acknowledgments
Introduction | Nature and the Nuclear Consensus in Postwar America

Part One | First Reactions
1. Leslie Groves, Report on the Trinity Test, 1945
2. Harry S. Truman, White House Statement on the Bombing of Hiroshima, 1945
3. Nagasaki Mushroom Cloud, 1945
4. Joseph H. Willits, “Social Adjustments to Atomic Energy,” 1946
5. Headline Comics, Atomic Man, 1946
6. Arthur H. Compton, “The Atomic Crusade and Its Social Implications,” 1947
7. H. M. Parker, “Speculations on Long-Range Waste Disposal Hazards,” 1948
8. General Advisory Committee Reports on Building the H-Bomb, 1949
9. Lewis L. Strauss to Harry S. Truman, 1949

Part Two | Building Consensus
1. National Security Council Report 68, 1950
2. Federal Civil Defense Administration, This Is Civil Defense, 1951
3. Federal Civil Defense Administration, Women in Civil Defense, 1952
4. Dwight D. Eisenhower, “Address before the General Assembly of the United Nations on Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy,” 1953
5. Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation, “What does Atomic Energy really mean to you?” 1953
6. Lewis L. Strauss, “My Faith in the Atomic Future,” 1955
7. Heinz Haber, The Walt Disney Story of Our Friend the Atom, 1956
8. Bureau of Public Roads, A Preliminary Report on Highway Needs for Civil Defense, 1956
9. Walter Reuther, Atoms for Peace: A Separate Opinion, 1956

Part Three | Challenging Consensus
1. Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein, “The Russell-Einstein Manifesto,” 1955
2. Roger Revelle and Milner B. Schaefer, “General Considerations Concerning the Ocean as a Receptacle for Artificially Radioactive Materials,” 1957
3. Atomic Energy Commission, Atomic Tests in Nevada, 1957
4. National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, “We Are Facing a Danger Unlike Any Danger That Has Ever Existed,” 1957
5. Atomic Energy Commission, Atoms for Peace U.S.A., 1958
6. Barry Commoner, “The Fallout Problem,” 1958
7. Edward Teller, “The Plowshare Program,” 1959
8. Office of Civil Defense and Mobilization, Fallout Maps, 1959
9. Herman Kahn and H. H. Mitchell, The Postattack Environment, 1961
10. Margaret Mead, “Are Shelters the Answer?” 1961
11. Women Strike for Peace Milk Campaign, 1961
12. Atomic Energy Commission, Annual Report, 1962
13. John F. Kennedy, “Commencement Address at American University,” 1963
14. David E. Lilienthal, Change, Hope, and the Bomb, 1963
15. John F. Kennedy, “Address to the American People on the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty,” 1963

Part Four | Confronting Paradox
1. Glenn T. Seaborg, “Environmental Effects of Producing Electric Power,” 1969
2. Minnesota Environmental Control Citizens Association, Anti-Nuclear Pamphlet, ca. 1969
3. Lenore Marshall, “The Nuclear Sword of Damocles,” 1971
4. Calvert Cliffs’ Coordinating Committee, Inc., v. United States Atomic Energy Commission, 1971
5. William R. Gould, “The State of the Atomic Industry,” 1974
6. Committee on the Present Danger, “Common Sense and the Common Danger,” 1976
7. Ralph W. Deuster, “Rx for the ‘Back’ of the Cycle,” 1976
8. Leonard Rifas, All-Atomic Comics, 1976
9. David N. Merrill, “Nuclear Siting and Licensing Process,” 1978
10. Helen Caldicott, Nuclear Madness, 1978
11. Abalone Alliance, “Declaration of Nuclear Resistance,” 1978
12. Report of the President’s Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island, 1979
13. Gloria Gregerson, Radiation Exposure and Compensation, 1981

Part Five | Renewal
1. David E. Lilienthal, Atomic Energy: A New Start, 1980
2. Ronald Reagan, “Address to Members of the British Parliament,” 1982
3. Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982
4. Jonathan Schell, The Fate of the Earth, 1982
5. Ronald Reagan, “Address to the Nation on Defense and National Security,” 1983
6. Carl Sagan, “The Nuclear Winter,” 1983
7. Office of Technology Assessment, Nuclear Power in an Age of Uncertainty, 1984
8. Campaign for a Nuclear Free Future, ca. 1984
9. Bernard Lown, “A Prescription for Hope,” 1985
10. Elizabeth Macias, High-Level Nuclear Waste Issues, 1987
11. Ronald Reagan, “Address to the 42nd Session of the United Nations,” 1987
12. Editors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, “A New Era,” 1991

Epilogue | The Nuclear Present
1. David Albright, Kathryn Buehler, and Holly Higgins, “Bin Laden and the Bomb,” 2002
2. Allison M. Macfarlane, “Yucca Mountain and High-Level Nuclear Waste Disposal,” 2006
3. Oregon Department of Energy, Hanford Cleanup: The First Twenty Years, 2009
4. Mark Z. Jacobson, “Nuclear Power Is Too Risky,” 2010
5. President’s Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future, Report to the Secretary of Energy, 2012
6. Nuclear Energy Institute, “Nuclear Energy: Powering America’s Future,” 2013
7. Ken Caldeira, Kerry Emanuel, James Hansen, and Tom Wigley, “To Those Influencing Environmental Policy but Opposed to Nuclear Power,” 2013
8. Latuff Cartoons, Fukushima Cartoon, 2014
9. John Asafu-Adjaye et al., “An Ecomodernist Manifesto,” 2015
Index

Nuclear Reactions

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    A Hardback by James W. Feldman, Paul S. Sutter

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      Publisher: University of Washington Press
      Publication Date: 01/11/2016
      ISBN13: 9780295999616, 978-0295999616
      ISBN10: 0295999616

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      Foreword: Postwar America’s Nuclear Paradox / Paul S. Sutter
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction | Nature and the Nuclear Consensus in Postwar America

      Part One | First Reactions
      1. Leslie Groves, Report on the Trinity Test, 1945
      2. Harry S. Truman, White House Statement on the Bombing of Hiroshima, 1945
      3. Nagasaki Mushroom Cloud, 1945
      4. Joseph H. Willits, “Social Adjustments to Atomic Energy,” 1946
      5. Headline Comics, Atomic Man, 1946
      6. Arthur H. Compton, “The Atomic Crusade and Its Social Implications,” 1947
      7. H. M. Parker, “Speculations on Long-Range Waste Disposal Hazards,” 1948
      8. General Advisory Committee Reports on Building the H-Bomb, 1949
      9. Lewis L. Strauss to Harry S. Truman, 1949

      Part Two | Building Consensus
      1. National Security Council Report 68, 1950
      2. Federal Civil Defense Administration, This Is Civil Defense, 1951
      3. Federal Civil Defense Administration, Women in Civil Defense, 1952
      4. Dwight D. Eisenhower, “Address before the General Assembly of the United Nations on Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy,” 1953
      5. Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation, “What does Atomic Energy really mean to you?” 1953
      6. Lewis L. Strauss, “My Faith in the Atomic Future,” 1955
      7. Heinz Haber, The Walt Disney Story of Our Friend the Atom, 1956
      8. Bureau of Public Roads, A Preliminary Report on Highway Needs for Civil Defense, 1956
      9. Walter Reuther, Atoms for Peace: A Separate Opinion, 1956

      Part Three | Challenging Consensus
      1. Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein, “The Russell-Einstein Manifesto,” 1955
      2. Roger Revelle and Milner B. Schaefer, “General Considerations Concerning the Ocean as a Receptacle for Artificially Radioactive Materials,” 1957
      3. Atomic Energy Commission, Atomic Tests in Nevada, 1957
      4. National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, “We Are Facing a Danger Unlike Any Danger That Has Ever Existed,” 1957
      5. Atomic Energy Commission, Atoms for Peace U.S.A., 1958
      6. Barry Commoner, “The Fallout Problem,” 1958
      7. Edward Teller, “The Plowshare Program,” 1959
      8. Office of Civil Defense and Mobilization, Fallout Maps, 1959
      9. Herman Kahn and H. H. Mitchell, The Postattack Environment, 1961
      10. Margaret Mead, “Are Shelters the Answer?” 1961
      11. Women Strike for Peace Milk Campaign, 1961
      12. Atomic Energy Commission, Annual Report, 1962
      13. John F. Kennedy, “Commencement Address at American University,” 1963
      14. David E. Lilienthal, Change, Hope, and the Bomb, 1963
      15. John F. Kennedy, “Address to the American People on the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty,” 1963

      Part Four | Confronting Paradox
      1. Glenn T. Seaborg, “Environmental Effects of Producing Electric Power,” 1969
      2. Minnesota Environmental Control Citizens Association, Anti-Nuclear Pamphlet, ca. 1969
      3. Lenore Marshall, “The Nuclear Sword of Damocles,” 1971
      4. Calvert Cliffs’ Coordinating Committee, Inc., v. United States Atomic Energy Commission, 1971
      5. William R. Gould, “The State of the Atomic Industry,” 1974
      6. Committee on the Present Danger, “Common Sense and the Common Danger,” 1976
      7. Ralph W. Deuster, “Rx for the ‘Back’ of the Cycle,” 1976
      8. Leonard Rifas, All-Atomic Comics, 1976
      9. David N. Merrill, “Nuclear Siting and Licensing Process,” 1978
      10. Helen Caldicott, Nuclear Madness, 1978
      11. Abalone Alliance, “Declaration of Nuclear Resistance,” 1978
      12. Report of the President’s Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island, 1979
      13. Gloria Gregerson, Radiation Exposure and Compensation, 1981

      Part Five | Renewal
      1. David E. Lilienthal, Atomic Energy: A New Start, 1980
      2. Ronald Reagan, “Address to Members of the British Parliament,” 1982
      3. Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982
      4. Jonathan Schell, The Fate of the Earth, 1982
      5. Ronald Reagan, “Address to the Nation on Defense and National Security,” 1983
      6. Carl Sagan, “The Nuclear Winter,” 1983
      7. Office of Technology Assessment, Nuclear Power in an Age of Uncertainty, 1984
      8. Campaign for a Nuclear Free Future, ca. 1984
      9. Bernard Lown, “A Prescription for Hope,” 1985
      10. Elizabeth Macias, High-Level Nuclear Waste Issues, 1987
      11. Ronald Reagan, “Address to the 42nd Session of the United Nations,” 1987
      12. Editors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, “A New Era,” 1991

      Epilogue | The Nuclear Present
      1. David Albright, Kathryn Buehler, and Holly Higgins, “Bin Laden and the Bomb,” 2002
      2. Allison M. Macfarlane, “Yucca Mountain and High-Level Nuclear Waste Disposal,” 2006
      3. Oregon Department of Energy, Hanford Cleanup: The First Twenty Years, 2009
      4. Mark Z. Jacobson, “Nuclear Power Is Too Risky,” 2010
      5. President’s Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future, Report to the Secretary of Energy, 2012
      6. Nuclear Energy Institute, “Nuclear Energy: Powering America’s Future,” 2013
      7. Ken Caldeira, Kerry Emanuel, James Hansen, and Tom Wigley, “To Those Influencing Environmental Policy but Opposed to Nuclear Power,” 2013
      8. Latuff Cartoons, Fukushima Cartoon, 2014
      9. John Asafu-Adjaye et al., “An Ecomodernist Manifesto,” 2015
      Index

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