Nuclear Nuevo México: Colonialism and the Effects of the Nuclear Industrial Complex on Nuevomexicanos by Myrriah Gómez (review)

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Carolyn Dekker
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Tucson: U of Arizona P, 2022. 163 pp. Paper, $30; e-book, $30. <p>In <em>Nuclear Nuevo México</em> Myrriah Gómez provides a history of the development of the atomic bomb and the ongoing impacts of the entire nuclear industry on New Mexico through the lens of nuclear colonialism and from the perspective of the <em>vecinos</em>, the Nuevomexicana/o neighbors and community members who were displaced for the creation of the Los Alamos National Lab on \"the Hill\" and who have been, and continue to be, the majority of its labor force and a large portion of the victims of its contaminants. She distinguishes nuclear colonialism from New Mexico's first two waves of settler colonialism because \"nuclear colonialism … targets not only Indigenous people but also other ethnic minority groups in poor economic situations that have become disenfranchised because of state occupation of their homelands\" (5).</p> <p>The book is rich with the experiences of the <em>vecinos</em>, including stories of the author's great-grandparents' displacement from their ranch in 1942 and the experiences of multiple generations of laboratory <strong>[End Page 81]</strong> workers within her family. Gomez's careful work of both mining and expanding the existing archive of Nuevomexicana/o experiences of Los Alamos is one of this book's greatest strengths. She uses new interviews conducted with laboratory workers and their families, recorded interviews from the Los Alamos Historical Archives, and internal documents from the lab to establish that workers like Candelario Esquibel, Leo Guerin, Raymond Means, José Corsinio Cordova, Sevedro Lujan, Escolastico Martinez, and Leopoldo Pacheco, all killed in three explosions in the 1950s, were working at tasks more dangerous than their positions or training warranted. Thus, they were intentionally recruited as unwitting lab rats in the development of safer protocols.</p> <p>These are vital histories, particularly framed against official histories that erase the wasting of life and theft of land by framing Nuevomexicana/o workers as \"unsung heroes\" of the nuclear age and the erasures and glamorizations of pop-cultural memory as exemplified in the television show <em>Manhattan</em>, to which she devotes an entire chapter. Throughout the book Gómez makes good on her promise to \"highlight the ways that Nuevomexicanas/os were marginalized before, during, and after the Manhattan Project\" (14).</p> <p>The fourth chapter, \"Environmental Racism in the Tularosa Basin,\" argues that environmental racism not only drove the locating of the Trinity test site near rural Hispanic communities but the subsequent exclusion of those communities from the federal Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA), which covers Nevada Test Site downwinders and other uranium workers. When this work came to press, Trinity downwinders organized under the Tularosa Basin Downwinders' Consortium were working against time to win an expansion that would make them eligible for compensation under the RECA before the sunset provision ended new claims in July 2022. However, on June 7, 2022, President Biden signed the RECA Extension Act of 2022, moving the final date for claims to June 10, 2024. The possible claimants still do not include Trinity downwinders, so the work of the activists is identically positioned, and Gómez's book is as current and topical as ever. It is essential reading for anyone interested in American environmental history, anti-nuclear activism, and the Southwestern region. <strong>[End Page 82]</strong></p> Carolyn Dekker Finlandia University Copyright © 2024 Western Literature Association ... </p>","PeriodicalId":23875,"journal":{"name":"Western American Literature","volume":"15 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Western American Literature","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/wal.2024.a933086","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE, AMERICAN","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Nuclear Nuevo México: Colonialism and the Effects of the Nuclear Industrial Complex on Nuevomexicanos by Myrriah Gómez
  • Carolyn Dekker
Myrriah Gómez, Nuclear Nuevo México: Colonialism and the Effects of the Nuclear Industrial Complex on Nuevomexicanos. Tucson: U of Arizona P, 2022. 163 pp. Paper, $30; e-book, $30.

In Nuclear Nuevo México Myrriah Gómez provides a history of the development of the atomic bomb and the ongoing impacts of the entire nuclear industry on New Mexico through the lens of nuclear colonialism and from the perspective of the vecinos, the Nuevomexicana/o neighbors and community members who were displaced for the creation of the Los Alamos National Lab on "the Hill" and who have been, and continue to be, the majority of its labor force and a large portion of the victims of its contaminants. She distinguishes nuclear colonialism from New Mexico's first two waves of settler colonialism because "nuclear colonialism … targets not only Indigenous people but also other ethnic minority groups in poor economic situations that have become disenfranchised because of state occupation of their homelands" (5).

The book is rich with the experiences of the vecinos, including stories of the author's great-grandparents' displacement from their ranch in 1942 and the experiences of multiple generations of laboratory [End Page 81] workers within her family. Gomez's careful work of both mining and expanding the existing archive of Nuevomexicana/o experiences of Los Alamos is one of this book's greatest strengths. She uses new interviews conducted with laboratory workers and their families, recorded interviews from the Los Alamos Historical Archives, and internal documents from the lab to establish that workers like Candelario Esquibel, Leo Guerin, Raymond Means, José Corsinio Cordova, Sevedro Lujan, Escolastico Martinez, and Leopoldo Pacheco, all killed in three explosions in the 1950s, were working at tasks more dangerous than their positions or training warranted. Thus, they were intentionally recruited as unwitting lab rats in the development of safer protocols.

These are vital histories, particularly framed against official histories that erase the wasting of life and theft of land by framing Nuevomexicana/o workers as "unsung heroes" of the nuclear age and the erasures and glamorizations of pop-cultural memory as exemplified in the television show Manhattan, to which she devotes an entire chapter. Throughout the book Gómez makes good on her promise to "highlight the ways that Nuevomexicanas/os were marginalized before, during, and after the Manhattan Project" (14).

The fourth chapter, "Environmental Racism in the Tularosa Basin," argues that environmental racism not only drove the locating of the Trinity test site near rural Hispanic communities but the subsequent exclusion of those communities from the federal Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA), which covers Nevada Test Site downwinders and other uranium workers. When this work came to press, Trinity downwinders organized under the Tularosa Basin Downwinders' Consortium were working against time to win an expansion that would make them eligible for compensation under the RECA before the sunset provision ended new claims in July 2022. However, on June 7, 2022, President Biden signed the RECA Extension Act of 2022, moving the final date for claims to June 10, 2024. The possible claimants still do not include Trinity downwinders, so the work of the activists is identically positioned, and Gómez's book is as current and topical as ever. It is essential reading for anyone interested in American environmental history, anti-nuclear activism, and the Southwestern region. [End Page 82]

Carolyn Dekker Finlandia University Copyright © 2024 Western Literature Association ...

核新墨西哥:殖民主义与核工业综合体对新墨西哥人的影响》,Myrriah Gómez著(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 核新墨西哥:殖民主义与核工业综合体对新墨西哥人的影响》,作者:Myrriah Gómez Carolyn Dekker Myrriah Gómez, Nuclear Nuevo México:殖民主义与核工业综合体对新墨西哥人的影响》。图森:亚利桑那大学出版社,2022 年。163 pp.纸质版,30 美元;电子书,30 美元。在《核新墨西哥》一书中,Myrriah Gómez 通过核殖民主义的视角,从新墨西哥人的角度,介绍了原子弹的发展史以及整个核工业对新墨西哥州的持续影响。新墨西哥人是因在 "山丘 "上建立洛斯阿拉莫斯国家实验室而流离失所的新墨西哥邻居和社区成员,他们过去是、现在仍然是实验室的大部分劳动力,也是实验室污染物的大部分受害者。她将核殖民主义与新墨西哥州的前两次定居者殖民主义浪潮区分开来,因为 "核殖民主义......不仅针对土著人,也针对其他经济状况不佳的少数民族群体,他们因国家占领其家园而被剥夺了权利"(5)。书中有丰富的维西诺人的经历,包括作者曾祖父母在 1942 年被赶出牧场的故事,以及她家族中多代实验室 [完 81 页] 工人的经历。戈麦斯对现有的新墨西哥人/其他族裔在洛斯阿拉莫斯的经历档案进行了仔细的挖掘和扩充,这是本书的最大优势之一。她利用对实验室工人及其家人进行的新访谈、洛斯阿拉莫斯历史档案中的访谈记录以及实验室的内部文件,证实了像坎德拉里奥-埃斯基贝尔、利奥-盖林、雷蒙德-米恩斯、何塞-科西尼奥-科尔多瓦、塞韦德罗-卢扬、埃斯科拉斯基多-马丁内斯和莱奥波尔多-帕切科(他们都在 20 世纪 50 年代的三次爆炸中丧生)这样的工人,他们所从事的工作比他们的职位或培训所要求的更加危险。因此,在制定更安全的规程时,他们被有意招募为不知情的小白鼠。这些都是至关重要的历史,尤其是在官方历史将新墨西哥工人诬蔑为核时代的 "无名英雄",从而抹杀了生命的浪费和土地的窃取,以及流行文化记忆的抹杀和美化的背景下,如电视剧《曼哈顿》(她用了整整一章的篇幅来描述该剧)。在整本书中,戈麦斯兑现了她的承诺,"强调了新墨西哥人在曼哈顿项目之前、期间和之后被边缘化的方式"(14)。第四章 "图拉罗萨盆地的环境种族主义 "认为,环境种族主义不仅促使特尼狄试验场选址在西班牙裔农村社区附近,而且随后还将这些社区排除在联邦《辐射暴露补偿法案》(RECA)之外,该法案涵盖了内华达试验场的下风口工人和其他铀矿工人。当这项工作付诸实施时,在图拉罗萨盆地下风工人联合会(Tularosa Basin Downwinders' Consortium)的组织下,特尼狄下风工人正在争分夺秒地努力争取扩大范围,以便在日落条款于 2022 年 7 月终止新索赔之前,使他们有资格根据《辐射暴露赔偿法案》获得赔偿。然而,2022 年 6 月 7 日,拜登总统签署了《2022 年 RECA 延期法案》,将索赔的最后日期推迟到 2024 年 6 月 10 日。可能的索赔人仍然不包括三一集团的下风向工人,因此活动家们的工作定位是相同的,戈麦斯的书也一如既往地具有时效性和话题性。对于任何对美国环境史、反核活动和西南地区感兴趣的人来说,这本书都是不可或缺的读物。结束语 [第 82 页] Carolyn Dekker 芬兰大学 Copyright © 2024 Western Literature Association ...
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来源期刊
Western American Literature
Western American Literature LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
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0.30
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50.00%
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