Description

Book Synopsis
Stunned by the news of Sputnik in 1957, the American public were to be treated over the next dozen years to the spectacle of an all-out national crusade: the race to beat the Russians to the moon. What few understood at the time - and what has largely been obscured in popular representations of this episode in movies and bestsellers - was the key economic and technical role played by manned space exploration in post-war US capitalist expansion. From Potsdam to Cape Canaveral, the yellow brick road twisted and turned, but its ultimate goal remained clear: the Oz of global American economic and political domination.

Taking off from that masterpiece of American fiction, Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow, Dale Carter tells the lurid tale of the postwar boom, through the history of the manned space program. Salvaged from the ashes of Nazi Germany (Pynchon's 'Oven State'), as US officials rounded up the Third Reich's leading V-2 scientists, the American

Trade Review
An informed, sober and witty investigation of space-weapon and space-probe politics and technology. -- Eric Mottram, Professor of American Studies, King's College, University of London

The Final Frontier The Rise and Fall of the

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    A Paperback / softback by Dale Carter

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      View other formats and editions of The Final Frontier The Rise and Fall of the by Dale Carter

      Publisher: Verso Books
      Publication Date: 01/02/1988
      ISBN13: 9780860919087, 978-0860919087
      ISBN10: 0860919080

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Stunned by the news of Sputnik in 1957, the American public were to be treated over the next dozen years to the spectacle of an all-out national crusade: the race to beat the Russians to the moon. What few understood at the time - and what has largely been obscured in popular representations of this episode in movies and bestsellers - was the key economic and technical role played by manned space exploration in post-war US capitalist expansion. From Potsdam to Cape Canaveral, the yellow brick road twisted and turned, but its ultimate goal remained clear: the Oz of global American economic and political domination.

      Taking off from that masterpiece of American fiction, Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow, Dale Carter tells the lurid tale of the postwar boom, through the history of the manned space program. Salvaged from the ashes of Nazi Germany (Pynchon's 'Oven State'), as US officials rounded up the Third Reich's leading V-2 scientists, the American

      Trade Review
      An informed, sober and witty investigation of space-weapon and space-probe politics and technology. -- Eric Mottram, Professor of American Studies, King's College, University of London

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