Dad built a bomb shelter in the backyard, Mom stocked the
survival kit in the basement, and the kids practiced ducking under
their desks at school. This was family life in the new era of the
A-bomb. This was civil defense. In this provocative work of social
and political history, Laura McEnaney takes us into the secretive
world of defense planners and the homes of ordinary citizens to
explore how postwar civil defense turned the front lawn into the
front line. The reliance on atomic weaponry as a centerpiece of
U.S. foreign policy cast a mushroom cloud over everyday life.
American citizens now had to imagine a new kind of war, one in
which they were both combatants and targets. It was the Federal
Civil Defense Administration's job to encourage citizens to adapt
to their nuclear present and future.
As McEnaney demonstrates, the creation of a civil defense
program produced new dilemmas about the degree to which civilian
society should be militarized to defend itself against internal and
external threats. Conflicts arose about the relative
responsibilities of state and citizen to fund and implement a
home-front security program. The defense establishment's resolution
was to popularize and privatize military preparedness. The doctrine
of "self-help" defense demanded that citizens become autonomous
rather than rely on the federal government for protection. Families
would reconstitute themselves as paramilitary units that could
quash subversion from within and absorb attack from without.
Because it solicited an unprecedented degree of popular
involvement, the FCDA offers a unique opportunity to explore how
average citizens, community leaders, and elected officials both
participated in and resisted the creation of the national security
state. Drawing on a wide variety of archival sources, McEnaney
uncovers the broad range of responses to this militarization of
daily life and reveals how government planners and ordinary people
negotiated their way at the dawn of the atomic age. Her work sheds
new light on the important postwar debate about what total military
preparedness would actually mean for American society.
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