"Winner of the 2014 J.I. Staley Prize, School of Advanced Research"
"Winner of the 2008 Rachel Carson Prize, Society for Social Studies of Science"
"Co-Winner of the 2006 Robert K. Merton Prize, Science, Knowledge, and Technology Section of the American Sociological Association"
"Honorable Mention for the 2007 John G. Cawelti Award, American Culture Association"
An important investigation of the sociocultural fallout of America's work on the atomic bomb
In The Nuclear Borderlands, Joseph Masco offers an in-depth look at the long-term consequences of the Manhattan Project. Masco examines how diverse groups in and around Los Alamos, New Mexico understood and responded to the U.S. nuclear weapons project in the post–Cold War period. He shows that the American focus on potential nuclear apocalypse during the Cold War obscured the broader effects of the nuclear complex on society, and that the atomic bomb produced a new cognitive orientation toward daily life, reconfiguring concepts of time, nature, race, and citizenship. This updated edition includes a brand-new preface by the author discussing current developments in nuclear politics and the scientific impact of the nuclear age on the present epoch of a human-altered climate.
"Masco seems to have taken to heart the tension between anthropology and science studies…. [His] book is fusion (that impossible goal of our nuclear culture) of the best kind."—Christopher Kelty, University of California, Los Angeles
"[This book] alters the meaning of ethnography in a way that will challenge all of us in anthropology."—Susan Harding, University of California, Santa Cruz
"No account of the post–Cold War environment can afford to ignore this study and the tangle of economic, political, and cultural rights, interests, and imperatives it maps."—Michael M. J. Fischer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology