Ok all of you who so brilliantly and rapidly offered me title - TopicsExpress



          

Ok all of you who so brilliantly and rapidly offered me title alternatives to give to the press, here is the opening of the Introduction to this book: a page or two to read... Two charged images dominate American life from the end of World War II to this moment. One invokes pain and terror: the great cloud rises above the American city, unleashing a firestorm whose aftermath blows sickness, deformity, death out into the landscape, enveloping the tidy suburbs and sowing poison on the farms, ranches, and wilderness spaces that ennoble the nation. The other seems its opposite: an expansive community takes form and matures, united in optimism and prosperity, as young families in new homes cluster at just the right distance to encourage the continuing reinvention of democratic community while honoring the American ideal of individualism. These are more than American nightmare and American dream— they are the settings for the drama that the United States has acted out since the first reports of the atomic inferno that destroyed Hiroshima in 1945. In 1947 they filled the pages of the great picture magazines. Today they form the basis for pop fiction and the movies and for wildly successful video games. Playing Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, tens of millions have been caught in the blast wave as a city is flattened by atomic holocaust, and then, for long minutes, struggled to recover, then just to survive, and then, finally, resigned themselves to death amidst the wreckage. Or, in the Fallout and S.T.A.L.K.E.R. series, they have wandered and foraged, exiles in the post-holocaust landscapes of the American West or the Soviet empire. Or they have become gods of the suburban landscape, creating virtual creatures in their own image, sims, and done the small detail work of feeding and clothing, motivating, socializing, and then entertaining their simulacra, shopping and teaching and exercising and inspiring them to live lives of gently ironic desperation. Across the reach of America’s preeminence and its embrace of empire, these narratives emerge and recede: fear and hope, catastrophe and celebration. In the midst of the virtual world, as in the concrete spheres of our nation and the nations we seek to influence and save, we reenact the myths and menaces of our histories. We yearn for something. * This is a book about the transformations of the American cultural landscape between the end of World War II and the first decade of the 21st century. During that period, more than 60 years in length, a nation that prided itself on continual reinvention and renewal faced threats to its very existence, alone, and as part of a globe facing universal destruction by human technology. The title is borrowed from a line by Bob Dylan, written during his most prolific period of prophecy, from 1964-1967. During those years, his songs, by turns moody and aphoristic or headlong and hilarious, limned an America riven by doubt about itself and its place in the world, an America exiled from its sense of innocence, promise and entitlement, thrust outside the gates of Eden, into a realm of danger, unwanted responsibility, and imminent nuclear apocalypse, yearning for a return to safety. But, as Dylan warned, there was darkness at the break of noon, a foreboding that eclipses both the sun and moon; we were, as one of his paler imitators declared directly, standing on the eve of destruction. Impelled by this sense of urgency, our culture produced a wild array of democratic art—movies, magazines, houses and subdivisions, tv shows, pop songs and the pocket radios to hear them on, countercultures small and large, and then, as one age merged into another, computer programs and video games that were built on the codes of mutually assured destruction from that earlier fear, and made possible a strange new interpenetration of the real and the imaginative, the physical and the virtual—that strange, ambiguous country in which we now live. Our cultural landscape is more than a simple collection of places. It contains the spaces we make, yes, but also the ways we find meaning in our surroundings, declaring them ours, and then imbuing them with myths and memories that link our presence to the past and the future. It is found in houses and cities, but also in novels and songs, advertisements and movies and television shows. In all these spaces and places, real and imagined, postwar America teemed with anxiety. For America, what our landscape means has always been critical to our identity, a place to wrestle for control of our sense of self, as individuals and as a nation and a culture. Our narratives, reaching back to the earliest European settlers and forward to the pontifications of teachers and politicians, declare our divinely ordained mission to occupy and expand, to exploit and transform, the ground beneath our feet. Yet for all its bravado, America has always squatted uneasily on the land beneath it, unsure whether it was loaned, bequeathed or stolen. If America is an Eden granted by divine decree, are we not always on the verge of expulsion? During the first half of the 20th century, that unease seemed to dissipate as Americans found themselves growing increasingly comfortable with the longevity of their experiment and the success of their settlement. They built monuments, physical and imaginative, that explored the implications of a national civilization settled upon a binding contract with nature. Even the Dust Bowl and the Depression failed to slow this process—the New Deal agricultural programs, the Hoover, Bonneville and Grand Coulee Dams, the TVA, all attest to the momentum behind it. But the events of August 1945 that ended World War II seemed to cancel the divine contract in ways warned of in older American narratives—Puritan, Indian, slave. A new, atomically unstable Nature, unleashed upon the world by this very nation, brought the threat of global eradication and the responsibility for global survival to national consciousness, beginning an era of deeply conflicted cultural signs, meanings and interpretations and an often-wild gyration of debates about national self-image and action. Well into the 21st century, that cultural instability shows no sign of abating. Outside the gates of Eden, as Bob Dylan prophetically wrote in 1964, we continue to assess and repent our failures, adjust to our new environment of doubt and responsibility, and, perhaps, find some way to end our exile and return to grace. Four generations of Americans have traced this trajectory. Even as the new era wrought by atomic weaponry threatened fundamental American beliefs about itself and its place in the world, the very forms of the debates were also rapidly changing. Through what medium was America to reconstruct its identity? Popular magazines, newsreels, movies, television, popular music, and then the technologies of the virtual: each of these media came into prominence, receded, and sometimes returned, as sites for a complex set of debates about the meaning and mission of America. In this book, all those media find their moments at center stage. …
Posted on: Fri, 09 Aug 2013 16:47:25 +0000

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