Suburban Empire: Cold War Militarization in the US Pacific by Lauren Hirshberg (review)

IF 0.8 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
M. X. Mitchell
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Lauren Hirshberg's brilliant cultural history of the U.S. militarization of Kwajalein explores the too-often-overlooked racialized, colonial dimensions of the U.S. military-industrial-academic complex.</p> <p>The places and peoples of Kwajalein Atoll—American and Marshallese; civilian and military—anchor <em>Suburban Empire</em>. This is a book about place-making—about the contested ways in which the U.S. military endeavored to transform ri-Kuwajleen places into both a technologically sophisticated military installation and a simulacrum of a segregated American suburb. The U.S. military used facilities at Kwajalein to provide logistical support for nuclear blasting in the Marshall Islands during the 1940s and 1950s. From the 1950s to the present day, the atoll has served as an \"impact zone\" for U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile targeting shots. Hirshberg argues that the suburbanization of Kwajalein served to sanitize the geographical expansion of the U.S. nuclear complex by obscuring its violent emplacement abroad in expropriated Native lands and waters.</p> <p>The book begins with an exploration of the interplay between securitization and racialization in the U.S. colonization of the Marshall Islands from the 1940s through the 1960s. Once administered by Japan as part of a League of Nations mandate, the United States invaded in 1944 and in 1947 designated the Marshall, Caroline, and Northern Mariana Islands as a part of a one-of-a-kind United Nations \"strategic trusteeship.\" The international colonial status authorized U.S. militarization and justified U.S. use of sites in the Marshall Islands for nuclear blasting and missile targeting. Hirshberg enriches the first chapter's overview of important events during this time period by exploring how they were commemorated and represented in local publications like Bell Laboratories pamphlets, the <em>Atomic Blast</em>, the <em>Marshall Post Inquirer</em>, and the <em>Micronesian Monthly</em>.</p> <p>The core of <em>Suburban Empire</em>, developed in chapters 2, 3, and 4, offers a rich and difficult-to-summarize exploration of the U.S. expropriation of lands at Kwajalein and the imposition of a regime of racial segregation that shaped <strong>[End Page 390]</strong> life on the atoll from the 1950s through the 1980s. The Army's cultivation of Kwajalein as an American home, Hirshberg shows, required Marshallese land and labor but also demanded the erasure of Marshallese people and placemaking. The U.S. Army paid Marshallese laborers reduced wages and enforced residential and social segregation by confining Islanders to the overcrowded, poorly resourced islet of Ebeye. In order to recruit American civilian engineers and scientists to work at the base, meanwhile, Army planners developed the U.S. residential area to physically and culturally resemble a domestic suburb. As a part of this, U.S. anti-Black racism traveled to Kwajalein, inflecting relationships between American and Marshallese communities and individuals. Through extensive archival work, Hirshberg evokes the texture of daily life across the atoll, from the base to the more intimate spaces where Americans and Islanders lived, worked, learned, and played.</p> <p>The book turns in the fifth chapter to Marshallese political mobilization on the eve of decolonization in the 1970s and 1980s. Hirshberg carefully reconstructs the events leading up to \"Operation Homecoming,\" a dramatic 1982 protest in which over one thousand Marshallese individuals sailed into and occupied the impact zone to reclaim the atoll as a ri-Kuwajleen place. Here, Hirshberg highlights the work of Marshallese activists and leaders including Julian Riklon, Ataji Balos, Amata Kabua, and many others, while simultaneously attending to the ways in which mobilization was constrained by U.S. pressure and censorship.</p> <p>The Republic of the Marshall Islands ultimately became a state \"in free association\" with the United States in 1986. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reviewed by:

  • Suburban Empire: Cold War Militarization in the US Pacific by Lauren Hirshberg
  • M. X. Mitchell (bio)
Suburban Empire: Cold War Militarization in the US Pacific By Lauren Hirshberg. Oakland: University of California Press, 2022. Pp. xii + 365.

Since time immemorial, Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands has been the ancestral home of the ri-Kuwajleen. For nearly eight decades, it has also been the site of a massive U.S. military installation that is central to the American nuclear program and force posture. Lauren Hirshberg's brilliant cultural history of the U.S. militarization of Kwajalein explores the too-often-overlooked racialized, colonial dimensions of the U.S. military-industrial-academic complex.

The places and peoples of Kwajalein Atoll—American and Marshallese; civilian and military—anchor Suburban Empire. This is a book about place-making—about the contested ways in which the U.S. military endeavored to transform ri-Kuwajleen places into both a technologically sophisticated military installation and a simulacrum of a segregated American suburb. The U.S. military used facilities at Kwajalein to provide logistical support for nuclear blasting in the Marshall Islands during the 1940s and 1950s. From the 1950s to the present day, the atoll has served as an "impact zone" for U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile targeting shots. Hirshberg argues that the suburbanization of Kwajalein served to sanitize the geographical expansion of the U.S. nuclear complex by obscuring its violent emplacement abroad in expropriated Native lands and waters.

The book begins with an exploration of the interplay between securitization and racialization in the U.S. colonization of the Marshall Islands from the 1940s through the 1960s. Once administered by Japan as part of a League of Nations mandate, the United States invaded in 1944 and in 1947 designated the Marshall, Caroline, and Northern Mariana Islands as a part of a one-of-a-kind United Nations "strategic trusteeship." The international colonial status authorized U.S. militarization and justified U.S. use of sites in the Marshall Islands for nuclear blasting and missile targeting. Hirshberg enriches the first chapter's overview of important events during this time period by exploring how they were commemorated and represented in local publications like Bell Laboratories pamphlets, the Atomic Blast, the Marshall Post Inquirer, and the Micronesian Monthly.

The core of Suburban Empire, developed in chapters 2, 3, and 4, offers a rich and difficult-to-summarize exploration of the U.S. expropriation of lands at Kwajalein and the imposition of a regime of racial segregation that shaped [End Page 390] life on the atoll from the 1950s through the 1980s. The Army's cultivation of Kwajalein as an American home, Hirshberg shows, required Marshallese land and labor but also demanded the erasure of Marshallese people and placemaking. The U.S. Army paid Marshallese laborers reduced wages and enforced residential and social segregation by confining Islanders to the overcrowded, poorly resourced islet of Ebeye. In order to recruit American civilian engineers and scientists to work at the base, meanwhile, Army planners developed the U.S. residential area to physically and culturally resemble a domestic suburb. As a part of this, U.S. anti-Black racism traveled to Kwajalein, inflecting relationships between American and Marshallese communities and individuals. Through extensive archival work, Hirshberg evokes the texture of daily life across the atoll, from the base to the more intimate spaces where Americans and Islanders lived, worked, learned, and played.

The book turns in the fifth chapter to Marshallese political mobilization on the eve of decolonization in the 1970s and 1980s. Hirshberg carefully reconstructs the events leading up to "Operation Homecoming," a dramatic 1982 protest in which over one thousand Marshallese individuals sailed into and occupied the impact zone to reclaim the atoll as a ri-Kuwajleen place. Here, Hirshberg highlights the work of Marshallese activists and leaders including Julian Riklon, Ataji Balos, Amata Kabua, and many others, while simultaneously attending to the ways in which mobilization was constrained by U.S. pressure and censorship.

The Republic of the Marshall Islands ultimately became a state "in free association" with the United States in 1986. Hirshberg examines decolonization in chapter 6, attending to the nuanced ways in which free association...

郊区帝国:Lauren Hirshberg 著的《冷战时期美国太平洋地区的军事化》(评论)
评论者: 郊区帝国:M. X. Mitchell (bio) Suburban Empire:美国太平洋地区的冷战军事化 作者:Lauren Hirshberg。奥克兰:奥克兰:加州大学出版社,2022 年。第 xii + 365 页。自古以来,马绍尔群岛的夸贾林环礁一直是里-夸贾林人的祖居地。近八十年来,这里也是美国大规模军事设施的所在地,是美国核计划和核力量态势的核心。劳伦-希尔施伯格(Lauren Hirshberg)在这本关于美国对夸贾林军事化的精彩文化史中,探讨了美国军事-工业-学术综合体的种族化、殖民化层面,而这些往往被忽视。夸贾林环礁上的地方和人民--美国人和马绍尔人;平民和军人--是《郊区帝国》的支柱。这是一本关于场所营造的书,讲述了美国军方努力将夸贾林岛改造成一个技术先进的军事设施和一个种族隔离的美国郊区的模拟场所的有争议的方式。20 世纪 40 年代和 50 年代,美军利用夸贾林的设施为马绍尔群岛的核爆破提供后勤支持。从 20 世纪 50 年代至今,该环礁一直是美国洲际弹道导弹瞄准射击的 "冲击区"。赫什伯格认为,夸贾林的郊区化掩盖了美国核设施在海外征用原住民土地和水域的暴力部署,起到了净化美国核设施地理扩张的作用。本书首先探讨了 20 世纪 40 年代至 60 年代美国对马绍尔群岛的殖民化过程中安全化与种族化之间的相互作用。作为国际联盟授权的一部分,马绍尔群岛曾由日本管理,1944 年美国入侵马绍尔群岛,并于 1947 年将马绍尔群岛、加罗林群岛和北马里亚纳群岛指定为联合国独一无二的 "战略托管 "的一部分。国际殖民地位授权美国进行军事化,并为美国在马绍尔群岛使用核爆和导弹瞄准地点提供了理由。希什伯格在第一章概述了这一时期的重要事件,并探讨了贝尔实验室小册子、《原子爆炸》、《马绍尔邮报询问者》和《密克罗尼西亚月刊》等当地出版物是如何纪念和表现这些事件的,从而丰富了第一章的内容。郊区帝国》的核心内容在第 2、3 和 4 章中展开,对美国征用夸贾林的土地和实行种族隔离制度进行了丰富而又难以概括的探讨。希尔施伯格指出,美军将夸贾林岛建成美国人的家园,需要马绍尔人的土地和劳动力,但同时也要求抹杀马绍尔人和地方建设。美军支付给马绍尔劳工的工资很低,并通过将岛民限制在过度拥挤、资源匮乏的埃贝耶岛上,强制实行居住和社会隔离。与此同时,为了招募美国文职工程师和科学家到基地工作,陆军规划人员开发了美军居住区,使其在物质和文化上都类似于国内郊区。作为其中的一部分,美国的反黑人种族主义传到了夸贾林,影响了美国和马绍尔社区及个人之间的关系。通过大量的档案工作,希什伯格唤起了整个环礁岛日常生活的质感,从基地到更私密的空间,美国人和岛民在那里生活、工作、学习和娱乐。本书第五章讲述了 20 世纪 70 年代和 80 年代非殖民化前夕马绍尔人的政治动员。希什伯格仔细还原了 "返乡行动 "的前因后果,在 1982 年的一次抗议活动中,一千多名马绍尔人乘船进入并占领了撞击区,将环礁岛重新恢复为里-库瓦伊林(ri-Kuwajleen)的地方。在这里,希什伯格重点介绍了朱利安-里克伦、阿塔吉-巴洛斯、阿玛塔-卡布阿等马绍尔活动家和领导人的工作,同时也关注了动员工作受到美国压力和审查制度限制的方式。马绍尔群岛共和国最终于 1986 年成为与美国 "自由联合 "的国家。希尔施伯格在第 6 章中探讨了非殖民化问题,关注了自由联合的细微方式......
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来源期刊
Technology and Culture
Technology and Culture 社会科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
14.30%
发文量
225
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Technology and Culture, the preeminent journal of the history of technology, draws on scholarship in diverse disciplines to publish insightful pieces intended for general readers as well as specialists. Subscribers include scientists, engineers, anthropologists, sociologists, economists, museum curators, archivists, scholars, librarians, educators, historians, and many others. In addition to scholarly essays, each issue features 30-40 book reviews and reviews of new museum exhibitions. To illuminate important debates and draw attention to specific topics, the journal occasionally publishes thematic issues. Technology and Culture is the official journal of the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT).
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