The 1950s and 1960s were a time in American history when leaders were saying that nuclear war was inevitable. During the Cold War, The USA and the USSR were locked in a struggle to see who could build the most nuclear weapons as a deterrent to military conflict and the government had to come up with a plan for what to do if the Russians dropped an atomic bomb on American soil. One Nation Underground by Kenneth D. Rose examines one aspect of that plan: the building of fallout shelters in preparation for the looming doomsday scenario. This book gives a good portrayal of the cultural forces that made fallout shelters a topic of discussion in mainstream culture and also explains why the fallout shelters never actually took off in popularity.
Rose starts off with a hard look at the 1950s and the Eisenhower administration. The government didn’t want another war but they realized it could happen. Their main plan of prevention was a histrionic posturing, puffing up the illusion that America was more than ready to fight if necessary. In reality, the Civil Defense Agency had no detailed plan of action. They toyed with the idea of mass evacuations from city centers but the logistics of such an undertaking were not inspiring. The idea of educating self-sufficient Americans on how to prepare for nuclear holocaust on their own seemed more plausible. Then in 1961, John F. Kennedy made a speech in Berlin, telling the world that America would use nuclear bombs against the Soviets if they were ever to invade Germany. Paranoia was ratcheted up another notch.
The book takes a more literary turn when Rose begins an analysis of science-fiction novels in the post-apocalypse subgenre. These novels of the late 1950s gave brutal and hopeless scenarios of what life would be like after a nuclear blast. The mainstream news media got in on this too as they published scientifically based stories about the worst-case possibilities of life’s potential for post-atomic immolation survival. Actually, these news articles were more speculative fiction than anything. Rose also looks at studies done by scientists and their literature, mostly in association with the RAND Corporation. Collectively these writings formed a grim cloud of despair that hung over the American mind like a massive horde of vultures just waiting for everyone to die so they can begin their feast.
Other topics covered are urban fallout shelters in public school basements, the marketing and selling of fallout shelters, propaganda films, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the cultural roots of the Survivalist and Militia Movements, and even more about discussions in the U.S. Congress about the efficacy and necessity of home owners building their own private shelters in their basements and back yards. The sales of fallout shelter equipment and materials never progressed the way the government anticipated. Fallout shelters were more of a discussion topic circulating throughout society and less of a reality in the lives of ordinary citizens. Rose gives a plausible, cultural and psychologically based explanation as to why so few were built.
One Nation Underground gives a good portrait of the Cold War, a darkly strange and fascinating period of American history. It is a little too heavy on the politics of the era but overall it does a good job of recreating the cultural atmosphere of those times. Those were bleak and unsettling days, casting an unnerving shadow over the optimistic spirit of American society. Looked at in this way, it is not surprising to see why both the hippie anti-war movement started at the middle of the 1960s and also why the paranoid, right wing extremist movements of more recent years originated in the era of the fallout shelter.