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Lines in the sand: An environmental history of Cold War New Mexico.

机译:沙中线条:新墨西哥冷战的环境历史。

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摘要

This dissertation explores the complex interactions between the Cold War military-scientific apparatus, the idea of a culture of the Cold War, and the desert environment of the Tularosa Basin in south-central New Mexico. During and after World War II, the War Department and then the Department of Defense established several military reserves in the region. The massive White Sands Missile Range (at 3,200 square miles the largest military reserve in North America and larger than Rhode Island and Delaware combined) and other military attaches would increasingly define the culture and economy of the Tularosa Basin.;Historians have cast places such as White Sands Missile Range as cratered wastelands. Yet the missile range and surrounding military reserves became a contested landscape that centered on the viability of the nonhuman natural world. Diverse communities sought to find their place in a Cold War society and in the process redefined the value of a militarized landscape. Undeniably, missile technology had a profound impact on south-central New Mexico and thus acts as a central theme in the region's postwar history. However, in the years after 1945, environmentalists, wildlife officials, tourists, and displaced ranchers, amongst many others, continued to find new fangled meanings and unexpected uses for the militarized desert environment of south-central New Mexico. The Tularosa Basin was not merely a destroyed landscape.;The design and sheer size of the missile range compelled local, national, and transnational voices to not just make sense of the economic implications of the missile range and surrounding military sites, but to rethink its cultural and environmental values in a changing Cold War society. It was a former home to ranchers still tied to the land through lease and suspension agreements. New Mexico Department of Game and Fish personnel cast the site as perfect for experimentation with exotic big game. Environmentalists and wildlife biologists saw the site as ideal for the reintroduction of the Mexican wolf. Tourists came to know the landscape through the simple obelisk at the Trinity Site. While missiles cratered the desert floor, the military bureaucracy did not hold absolute power over the complex interactions between cultures, economies, and the nonhuman natural environment on the postwar Tularosa Basin.
机译:本文探讨了冷战军事科学仪器,冷战文化思想与新墨西哥州中南部图拉洛萨盆地沙漠环境之间的复杂相互作用。第二次世界大战期间及之后,美国陆军部和国防部在该地区建立了数个军事后备队。庞大的白沙导弹靶场(面积为3200平方英里,是北美最大的军事后备区,比罗德岛和特拉华州的总和还大)和其他军事附属物将越来越多地定义Tularosa盆地的文化和经济。白沙导弹靶场为陨石坑荒地。然而,导弹射程和周围的军事储备却成了围绕非人类自然世界生存能力的有争议的景观。各种各样的社区试图在冷战社会中找到自己的位置,并在此过程中重新定义了军事化景观的价值。不可否认,导弹技术对新墨西哥州中南部产生了深远影响,因此成为该地区战后历史的中心主题。然而,在1945年之后的几年中,环保主义者,野生动植物官员,游客和流离失所的牧场主,除其他外,继续为新墨西哥州中南部的军事化沙漠环境找到新的含义和意想不到的用途。 Tularosa盆地不仅是被破坏的景观;导弹射程的设计和巨大的规模迫使地方,国家和跨国界发出声音,不仅要理解导弹射程和周围军事地点的经济意义,而且要重新考虑其范围。不断变化的冷战社会中的文化和环境价值观。这是牧场主的故居,牧场主仍然通过租赁和停工协议与土地挂钩。新墨西哥州游戏与鱼类部的工作人员认为该网站非常适合尝试异国情调的大型游戏。环保主义者和野生生物学家认为该地点是重新引入墨西哥狼的理想之地。游客通过三位一体遗址上的简单方尖碑开始了解风景。虽然导弹在沙漠地面上飞奔,但军事官僚机构对战后Tularosa盆地的文化,经济和非人类自然环境之间的复杂互动并没有绝对的控制权。

著录项

  • 作者

    Edgington, Ryan H.;

  • 作者单位

    Temple University.;

  • 授予单位 Temple University.;
  • 学科 History United States.;Environmental Sciences.;History of Science.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2008
  • 页码 335 p.
  • 总页数 335
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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