Description |
xiv, 204 pages, [8] pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm. |
Series |
Twayne's oral history series ; no. 19 |
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Twayne's oral history series ; no. 19.
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Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 199-200) and index. |
Contents |
1. The Secret Project -- 2. Arriving at P.O. Box 1663 -- 3. Three Naval Officers and a Child's Secret -- 4. Diversions and Safe Havens -- 5. The Little Green Schoolhouse -- 6. Two Views from Bathtub Row -- 7. Fathers and Sons -- 8. Teenagers' Perspectives -- 9. Nella's Circle -- 10. The Cat Screamed All Night -- 11. The War Ends -- 12. From Soldier to Civilian -- 13. Arriving after the War -- and Again Decades Later -- 14. Three Friends -- 15. "Atomic Bomb, Atomic Bomb" -- 16. The Spy, the H-bomb, and the Hearing -- 17. A Hat to Remember -- 18. The Lure of the Land -- 19. Coming of Age in the 1960s: Vietnam, the Environment, and Civil Rights -- 20. You Can Go Home Again, But. |
Summary |
Katrina R. Mason has interviewed a wide range of people who spent all or parts of their childhoods in Los Alamos - from its muddy beginnings in 1943, when residents officially lived at P.O. Box 1663, to the late 1950s, after the laboratory had come under the auspices of the Atomic Energy Commission - to create this engaging and provocative portrait of a place that has come to epitomize both the scientific advances and the moral ambiguities of this century. Collectively the wartime children of Los Alamos - the children of scientists, of machinists and technicians from around the country, of construction workers from Texas and Oklahoma, and of Spanish Americans - constituted a microcosm of the United States. Mason identifies three elements common to their childhood recollections: a magnetic attraction to the land; a sense of security, that children always felt safe there; and multiculturalism. Almost all the children interviewed attribute their interest in other cultures and ability to get along with all kinds of people to their experience at Los Alamos. Some note that in important ways Los Alamos was an unusually stratified community, but most agree that scholastic achievement, not family background, determined one's place in the children's social strata. Mason gives readers a glimpse of what it was like to be the child of such luminous fathers as J. Robert Oppenheimer, Enrico Fermi, Edward Teller, Hans Bethe, and Kenneth Bainbridge at such an intense moment in American history. Her interviews also show what it was like to live in such a community when you were the child of a Spanish-American laborer or a machinist who'd brought his family over from a neighboring state. She explores how the children have dealt with their often conflicting feelings about their parents' involvement in the creation of such a destructive weapon. Mason's volume illuminates these personal and often very emotional dimensions of a fascinating historical era, and as such should prove invaluable to students of modern American history. |
Subject |
Atomic bomb -- New Mexico -- Los Alamos -- History.
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Children -- New Mexico -- Los Alamos -- Biography.
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Los Alamos (N.M.) -- Description and travel.
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Atomic bomb. (OCoLC)fst00820568
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Children. (OCoLC)fst00854835
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Travel. (OCoLC)fst01155558
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New Mexico -- Los Alamos.
(OCoLC)fst01205849
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Kind.
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Lebenswelt.
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Los Alamos <NM>
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Genre/Form |
Oral histories. (OCoLC)fst01726295
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Biography. (OCoLC)fst01423686
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History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
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Oral histories.
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Other Form: |
Online version: Mason, Katrina R. Children of Los Alamos. New York : Twayne Publishers ; London : Prentice Hall International, ©1995 (OCoLC)645798661 |
ISBN |
0805791388 (hc ; alk. paper) |
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9780805791389 (hc ; alk. paper) |
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0805791396 (pbk. ; alk. paper) |
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9780805791396 (pbk. ; alk. paper) |
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