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American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War
 
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American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War [Hardcover]

Carole Gallagher (Author), Keith Schneider (Foreword)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 10, 1993
American Ground Zero is the extraordinary product of one photojournalist's decade-long commitment, a gripping, courageous collection of portraits and interviews of those whose lives were crossed by radioactive fallout.

For twelve years beginning in 1951, the United States government conducted above ground testing of nuclear weapons in the deserts of Nevada. For more than four decades it has tried to cover up the human and environmental devastation wrought by this testing. In American Ground Zero, Carole Gallagher has penetrated the veil of official secrecy and anonymity to document the incredible untold story of the Americans whose misfortune it was to live downwind of the nuclear detonations - those citizens described in a top-secret Atomic Energy Commission memo as "a low-use segment of the population" - and of civilian workers and military personnel exposed to radiation at the Nevada Test Site.

The above ground nuclear testing was "the most prodigiously reckless program of scientific experimentation in United States history," Keith Schneider notes in his foreword to the book. Many of its 126 fallout clouds floated across the American West and eastward with radiation levels comparable to those released at Chernobyl. Yet residents of the downwind areas were consistently told that there was no danger, and were even encouraged to "participate in a moment of history" by coming out to watch these fallout clouds drifting over their homes.

Abandoning her career as a successful New York photographer, Carole Gallagher moved to Utah in 1983 and spent the next ten years networking among radiation survivors' groups and finding people willing to be photographed and tell their story. She covered six downwind states in all, including Test Site workers and atomic veterans. The result is a striking gallery of the undecorated casualties of an undeclared war. Never exploitative, Gallagher's photographs only rarely convey the subjects' considerable physical sufferings: instead, they invite the viewer to witness the beauty and value in these ordinary lives.

Carole Gallagher is a photographer whose work has been shown in galleries and museums around the world. She is currently living in New York City.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

From 1951 to 1963, the U.S. government conducted atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons in Nevada without regard to the effect of radioactive fallout on humans, livestock and the environment. In the late 1950s, birth defects and deaths from cancer began to soar among civilian and military test-site workers and their newborn children, and among "downwinders" living in Nevada, Utah and other western states. Gallagher, a professional photographer, spent several years interviewing and photographing these nuclear-test victims and gathering evidence of official indifference, callousness and outright cover-ups. The sheer density of suffering depicted here is awesome; in certain Utah towns, for instance, Gallagher found cases of cancer in every house. The bitter, stoic testimony of the victims (many of whom have since died), accompanied by Gallagher's photographic portraits of them, is deeply disturbing and exposes a major national scandal. Photos.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

This book is a collection of photographs and oral histories of people whose lives were affected by radioactive fallout--civilians in Morman Utah and other Western states unlucky enough to live "downwind" from U.S. nuclear weapons testing during the 1950s and 1960s. Gallagher, a former New York photographer, spent seven years interviewing and photographing radiation survivors, who included dairy farmers, ranchers, professors, Native Americans, housewives, soldiers, artists, and shepherds. What they had in common were leukemias, brain tumors, birth defects, diabetes, sterility, miscarriages, thyroid cancers, the death of children, medical bills, and funerals--not to mention dirty fallout and dirty politics. Gallagher's photos of these victims without status in this lonely geography are compelling and speak volumes. Highly recommended for all collections.
- Diane M. Fortner, Univ. of California Lib., Berkeley
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 461 pages
  • Publisher: The MIT Press (March 10, 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262071460
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262071468
  • Product Dimensions: 10.4 x 10.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,365,940 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Carole Gallagher was born in New York City, seven miles from Times Square, on July 16, 1950, the fifth anniversary of the first detonation of an atomic bomb: Trinity, at Alamogordo, New Mexico. The Nuclear Age and the Cold War, she later speculated, enabled a type of globalized emotional abuse of children who were engaging in futile "Duck and Cover" exercises in their schools regularly, fearing they could die in a global thermonuclear war at any moment, for the entirety of their childhood.

When she was 8 years old, an aunt taught her how to print a photograph. In her teens Gallagher became an artist, photographer, and writer. She did her graduate work in fine arts at Hunter College of the City University of New York, and in 1977 began teaching photography at one of the city's community colleges and at a private women's college in Westchester. Concurrent with her teaching career, she became a widely-exhibited artist, with two shows at the prestigious Leo Castelli Gallery in New York as well as museums in Europe and the United States.

In 1981, two phrases she encountered in her readings set her life in a new direction. While studying a biography of the American photographer Dorothea Lange, she discovered that the following thought by Francis Bacon had always been pinned to her darkroom door: "The contemplation of things as they are, without error or confusion, without substitution or imposture, is in itself a nobler thing than a whole harvest of invention." She had been researching the nuclear military-industrial complex since 1979, when 10,000 pages of declassified top secret papers from the Atomic Energy Commission had been released to the public, and came across a disturbing memo from the AEC which noted that the people living downwind of the recently opened (1951) Nevada Nuclear Test Site were "a low-use segment of the population," expendable in the pursuit of nuclear superiority over what was then the U.S.S.R.

By 1983 Gallagher had moved to St. George, Utah to research, investigate and document the effects of nuclear tests on atomic veterans, test site workers, and people living downwind. In 1988 she was awarded a grant to finish her book, "American Ground Zero," by the MacArthur Foundation's Program for Research and Writing in International Peace and Security. In 1989 she began teaching photojournalism in the Communication Department of the University of Utah, as well as being a visiting professor of fine art photography in the Art Department there.

American Ground Zero: the Secret Nuclear War was published by The MIT Press and later by Random House, at the direction of publisher Sir Harold Evans, "as an act of conscience." A traveling companion exhibition was organized by the International Center of Photography in New York with seven museum venues in the United States. The exhibition also traveled to London, Kazakhstan and Hiroshima. Gallagher's photographs and essays have been widely exhibited and published in the decades since.

Studs Terkel remarked that, "This is more than a cautionary tale. It is a revelation of something apocalyptic. The Soviet Union was condemned by the world for keeping Chernobyl a three-day secret. Our nuclear bomb tests in Nevada were kept a thirty-year secret. Our respected scientists, engineers, and administrations were the guilty parties and we, the American people, were kept wholly ignorant of peril without precedent." The Los Angeles Times Book Review noted "Gallagher's discipline in becoming 'a blank slate upon which the stories and images could be written' has resulted in a document of immense authority and humane urgency." Herbert Mitgang reviewed it for The New York Times: "As you look at Carole Gallagher's powerful pictures and read her angry words, you may be reminded of James Agee's 'Let Us Now Praise Famous Men' ... Ms. Gallagher's book deserves to be read as a crusading story of the consequences of the nuclear-arms industry's lingering contamination and deception: as an American Chernobyl."

See website, http://www.carolegallagher.info/index.htm, for more information.


 

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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Compassionately denying one's ability to hide truth., June 4, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War (Hardcover)
I have had this book for two years. Reading it completely 9 times and countless partial times. Gallagher in her effort "to become a blank slate upon which the stories could be written" has embodied the voice of a people not just a position of personal opinion. Hearing that voice cause's the reader to open there eye's to the stark reality of what "we the people" have allowed to happen. Revealing just how fast the holocost of the WWII was pushed out of the conscientious of the people. Allowing the same mentality that drove the Nazi's, to develope in the country "were that could not happen". Without a doubt this "work" is not for the light hearted. Reality with weight, forces the reader to think. Cause's the reader to question not only the government structure and poilcy's we have let be set but the moral code by which we justify a means to a end. How do you determine who live's and who dies? What and Who determines the worth of a human being? You will be challanged, morally, and emotionally. Carole Gallagher has painted people, words, and pictures together in a way that you will not shake off anytime soon. Personal stories will bury themselve's deep into your heart and mind. You will hear the echoed cry's of a people for which there was no justice, no hope. The bottom line reality is we let it happen. This is "the wake up call" Gallagher presents the reader with. It is very disturbing wake up call.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a very compelling set of stories and B&W photographs..., April 18, 2005
By 
John Hansen (Cambridge, Mass. USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War (Hardcover)
I'm a science writer, and I was conducting some research at the M.I.T. library regarding the 1962 series of nuclear tests at Johnston Island in the Pacific. Mostly I was seeking highly technical information -- but I saw this volume sitting on the shelf next to the monographs I was reviewing, so I took what I originally intended to be a quick glance.

After several hours' reading of "American Ground Zero", I found myself quite upset, for this collection of highly credible, first-person accounts clearly demonstrates ongoing efforts of the federal government to ignore, downplay -- even falsify -- data regarding the atomic testing of the 1950s, '60s, '70s, and '80s, particularly the atmospheric tests conducted at the Nevada Test Site near Las Vegas up through 1962.

In today's debate regarding DOE's Yucca Mountain Project, the credibility of the federal government and its experts is a big issue in Nevada. This volume shows why -- through first-hand accounts and compelling photography, presented with the perspective of subsequent time. (Yucca mountain is an underground facility located on a corner of the old Nevada Test Site, and it is to become the nation's primary repository for high-level nuclear waste.)

For at least fifteen years, I have been following in the scientific literature the research & development of Yucca mountain. My own feelings on the matter had been ambivalent for high-level waste must be stored somewhere. Recently, I had become concerned with revelations regarding falsification of data by DOE employees and its contractors.

However, in one fell swoop -- this book completely persuaded me to the righteousness of the cause of those many Nevadans who oppose Yucca mountain. It clearly shows that Nevadans (along with residents of Utah and other downwind states) have already suffered far beyond their fair share of the nation's nuclear burden.

Sadly, the sacrifice of these citizens is not only largely unacknowledged today -- this work clearly shows that their earlier "cooperation" was concurrent with misrepresentations by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), the predecessor to today's Department of Energy (DOE), as well as by various military authorities.

Many of the individuals profiled in this volume are (were) former employees of the AEC and its contractors, or are (were) military veterans who participated in these atomic tests. Their accounts all seem to have one common thread -- that there were repeated efforts by authorities to downplay, or ignore, radioactive releases and associated health effects from both above- and below-ground nuclear tests.

The author, Carole Gallagher, deserves our nation's appreciation for documenting so eloquently the experiences of these otherwise ordinary citizens and bringing them to our collective attention. Unfortunately, their living testimonies and images are quickly passing...
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Carole tells how the Gov't. knew they would kill US Citizens, December 21, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War (Hardcover)
Carole Gallagher has written the most informative and descriptive book ever about the how the U S Government knew that innocent americans would die from the atomic bomb tests and were considered as GUINEA PIGS for the effects of radiation on humans and how the Government is still, to this day keeping documents top secret that contain information regarding how radiation effects humans when exposed to it, yet we are still being exposed to man made radiation and all for a profit for the corperate world and their bank accounts. This book is a eye opener This is written By a atomic veteran that worked on the atomic bomb while in the U S Air Force (50-54) in underground tunnel systems in New Mexico and Texas and participated in one atomic bomb test at Fort Hood, Texas. During the four (4) years I was in the USAF and has read 28 books on the subject. I was hospitalized six (6) times and treated as a outpatient thirty five (35) times and all I was ever told that there is not enough radiation to harm me. I now have 15 chronic diseases linked to radiation exposure plus cataracts. Carole Gallagher is a great author and cares less whose feet get hurt so the truth can be told. This is a must read Vernon F. Sousa National Association of Atomic Veterans Research Coordinator
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