THE NUCLEAR AGE : AN EPIC RACE FOR ARMS POWER AND SURVIVAL / BY SERHII PLOKHY
Material type:
TextLanguage: English Publication details: UK : PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE , 2025.Description: 422PISBN: - 9780241582862
- 23 327.1747 PLO/N
| Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
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Dept. of Arabic General Stacks | Dept. of Arabic | 327.1747 PLO/N (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | ARA11660 |
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1. Prophecy 7
2. Fright 16
3. Nazis and Their Friends 28
4. Transatlantic Alliance 40
5. Manhattan Project 52
6. Unequal Partners 65
7. American Bomb 79
8. Stolen Secret 93
9. United Nations 105
10. Union Jack 117
11. Stalin’s Bomb 131
12. British Hurricane 143
13. Managing Fear 155
14. Super Bomb 168
15. Missile Gap 181
16. Bombe Atomique Copyrighted Material 195
viiiContents
17. China Syndrome 206
18. Cuban Gamble 218
19. Banning the Bomb 229
20. Star of David 243
21. MAD Men 256
22. Smiling Buddha 270
23. Star Wars 283
24. The Fall of the Nuclear Colossus 296
25. Giving Up the Bomb 310
26. The Return of Fear 326
27. Preemptive War 340
On 16 July 1945, the Nuclear Age began with the explosion of the first atomic bomb and the words of J. Robert Oppenheimer: 'Now I am become Death, the Destroyer of Worlds.'
While the threat of mutually assured destruction kept a lid on a simmering and tense geopolitical landscape, events like the Chernobyl disaster and near-misses like the Cuban Missile Crisis showed that total destruction was only ever one malfunction, mistake, or miscommunication away. Now, as governments re-arm their nuclear arsenals, treaties designed to limit the acquisition and use of nuclear weapons fall away, and nuclear weapons come increasingly within reach of non-state actors, we are on the brink of a renaissance of the nuclear industry.
In The Nuclear Age, acclaimed historian Serhii Plokhy paints an intricate picture of a world governed by fear. From the first artificial splitting of the atom in 1917 and the race to create the first atomic bomb in World War II, through the fraught arms race of the Cold War, to the imperialism, neo-colonial motivation and wars being waged today, the threat posed by nuclear weapons is as pertinent as ever.
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