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Much has been written in the West on the history of the Soviet
space program but few Westerners have read direct first-hand
accounts of the men and women who were behind the many Russian
accomplishments in exploring space. The memoir of Academician Boris
Chertok, translated from the original Russian, fills that gap. In
Volume 1 of "Rockets and People," Chertok described his early life
as an aeronautical engineer and his adventures as a member of the
Soviet team that searched postwar, occupied Germany for the
remnants of the Nazi rocket program. In Volume 2, Chertok takes up
the story after his return to the Soviet Union in 1946, when Stalin
ordered the foundation of the postwar missile program at an old
artillery factory northeast of Moscow. Chertok gives an
unprecedented view into the early days of the Soviet missile
program. With a keen talent for combining technical and human
interests, Chertok writes of the origins and creation of the
Baykonur Cosmodrome in a remote desert region of Kazakhstan. He
devotes a substantial portion of Volume 2 to describing the launch
of the first Sputnik satellite and the early lunar and
interplanetary probes designed under legendary Chief Designer
Sergey Korolev in the late 1950s and early 1960s. He ends with a
detailed description of the famous R-16 catastrophe known as the
"Nedelin disaster," which killed scores of engineers during
preparations for a missile launch in 1960.
Volume 3 of the memoirs of Academician Boris Chertok, translated
from the original Russian. Covers the history of the Soviet space
program from 1961 to 1967.
The song remains the most basic unit of modern pop music. Shaped
into being by historical forces-cultural, aesthetic, and
technical-the song provides both performer and audience with a
world marked off by a short, discrete, and temporally demarcated
experience. One-Track Mind: Capitalism, Technology, and the Art of
the Pop Song brings together 16 writers to weigh in on 16 iconic
tracks from the history of modern popular music. Arranged
chronologically in order of release of the tracks, and spanning
nearly five decades, these essays zigzag across the cultural
landscape to present one possible history of pop music. There are
detours through psychedelic rock, Afro-pop, Latin pop, glam rock,
heavy metal, punk, postpunk, adult contemporary rock, techno,
hip-hop, and electro-pop here. More than just deep histories of
individual songs, these essays all expand far beyond the track
itself to offer exciting and often counterintuitive histories of
transformative moments in popular culture. Collectively, they show
the undiminished power of the individual pop song, both as
distillations of important flashpoints and, in their afterlives, as
ghostly echoes that persist undiminished but transform for
succeeding generations. Capitalism and its principal good, capital,
help us frame these stories, a fact that should surprise no one
given the inextricable relationship between art and capitalism
established in the twentieth century. At the root, readers will
find here a history of pop with unexpected plot twists, colorful
protagonists, and fitting denouements.
Boris Chertok's memoirs are part of the second generation of
publications on Soviet space history, one that eclipsed the
(heavily censored) first generation published during the Communist
era. Memoirs constituted a large part of the second generation. The
distribution of material spanning the four volumes of Chertok's
memoirs is roughly chronological. This, the fourth and final volume
is largely devoted to the Soviet project to send cosmonauts to the
Moon in the 1960s, covering all aspects of the development of the
giant N-1 rocket. The last portion of this volume covers the
origins of the Salyut and Mir space station programs, ending with a
fascinating description of the massive Energiya-Buran project,
developed as a countermeasure to the American Space Shuttle. NASA
SP-2011-4110
Much has been written in the West on the history of the Soviet
space program but few Westerners have read direct first-hand
accounts of the men and women who were behind the many Russian
accomplishments in exploring space. The memoirs of Academician
Boris Chertok, translated from the original Russian, fills that
gap. Chertok began his career as an electrician in 1930 at an
aviation factory near Moscow. Twenty-seven years later, he became
deputy to the founding figure of the Soviet space program, the
mysterious "Chief Designer" Sergey Korolev. Chertok's
sixty-year-long career and the many successes and failures of the
Soviet space program constitute the core of his memoirs, Rockets
and People. In these writings, spread over four volumes,
Academician Chertok not only describes and remembers, but also
elicits and extracts profound insights from an epic story about a
society's quest to explore the cosmos. In Volume 1, Chertok
describes his early years as an engineer and ends with the mission
to Germany after the end of World War II when the Soviets captured
Nazi missile technology and expertise. Volume 2 takes up the story
with the development of the world's first intercontinental
ballistic missile (ICBM) and ends with the launch of Sputnik and
the early Moon probes. In Volume 3, Chertok recollects the great
successes of the Soviet space program in the 1960s including the
launch of the world's first space voyager Yuriy Gagarin as well as
many events connected with the Cold War. Finally, in Volume 4,
Chertok meditates at length on the massive Soviet lunar project
designed to beat the Americans to the Moon in the 1960s, ending
with his remembrances of the Energiya-Buran project. NASA
SP-2005-4110.
In this, the fourth and final volume of his memoirs, Boris Chertok
concludes his monumental trek through a nearly 100-year life. As
with the previous English-language volumes, the text has been
significantly modified and extended over the original Russian
versions published in the 1990s. The first volume covered his
childhood, early career, and transformation into a missile engineer
by the end of World War II. In the second volume, he took the story
up through the birth of the postwar Soviet ballistic-missile
program and then the launch of the world's artificial satellite,
Sputnik. This was followed, in the third volume, by a description
of the early and spectacular successes of the Soviet space program
in the 1960s, including such unprecedented achievements as the
flight of cosmonaut Yuriy Gagarin. The fourth volume concludes his
memoirs on the history of the Soviet space program with a lengthy
meditation on the failed Soviet human lunar program and then brings
the story to a close with the events of the 1970s, 1980s, and
1990s. This, the fourth and final volume is largely devoted to the
Soviet project to send cosmonauts to the Moon in the 1960s,
covering all aspects of the development of the giant N-1 rocket.
The last portion of this volume covers the origins of the Salyut
and Mir space station programs, ending with a fascinating
description of the massive Energiya-Buran project, developed as a
countermeasure to the American Space Shuttle. NASA SP-2011-4110.
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