Article ID: CBB155434883

Embracing Mystery: Radiation Risks and Popular Science Writing in the Early Cold War (2021)

unapi

Narrative form is crucial to the understanding of science in popular culture. This is particularly true with subjects such as radiation, in which the technical details at hand are often remote from everyday experience—as well as contested or uncertain among experts. This article examines the narrative choices made by three popular texts that publicized radiation risks to the public during the Cold War: John Hersey's Hiroshima, David Bradley's No Place to Hide, and Ralph Lapp's The Voyage of the Lucky Dragon. It contends that each author borrowed from well-established literary genres and that this borrowing was crucial to coherence and effective messaging of the argument. At the same time, placing the arguments in such a familiar form served to blunt some of the radical potential in those same messages.

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Article Jacob Hamblin; Linda M. Richards (2021) Connecting to the Living History of Radiation Exposure. Journal of the History of Biology (pp. 1-6). unapi

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https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB155434883/

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Authors & Contributors
O'Connor, Ralph
Hutchinson, Hazel
Domaradzki, Jan
Piel, Helen
Slaughter, Aimee
Wolfe, Audra Jayne
Journals
Substantia: An International Journal of the History of Chemistry
Victorian Literature and Culture
Science as Culture
Science and Education
Journal of the History of Biology
Publishers
University of Pittsburgh Press
Concepts
Popularization
Public understanding of science
Popular culture
Communication of scientific ideas
Science and literature
Science and culture
People
Smith, John Maynard
Dickens, Charles
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
21st century
20th century, late
18th century
17th century
Places
United States
Great Britain
China
Sweden
Spain
Canada
Institutions
Genetics Society of America
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