This article is a sample of science and technology stories about the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, drawn principally from popular magazines which reported nuclear news in the 1940s and 1950s. It shows that many of the accounts were widely optimistic and sensational in their claims about the potential uses of nuclear power, and suggests the reasons for the sensationalism and overconfidence in science and technology. The concluding section discusses the general implications for the present and future popularization of science and technology journalism and communication.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
Del SestoS. L., Science, Politics, and Controversy: Civilian Nuclear Power in the United States, 1946–1974, Westview Press, Boulder, 1979.
2.
United States Congress, Hearing Before the Special Committee on Atomic Energy, A Bill for the Development and Control of Atomic Energy, 79th Congress, 2nd Session, 1946, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., p. 102, 1947.
3.
Public Law 585, The Atomic Energy Act of 1946, United States Statutes at Large, 60, Part 1, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., p. 757, 1947.
4.
LangerR. M., The Miracle of U-235: What Life May be Like in the Uranium Age, Popular Mechanics, 75, pp. 1–5, January 1941.
5.
FisherH. L., Big Things Ahead, American Magazine, 157, p. 21, April 1954.
6.
StassenH. E., Atoms for Peace, Ladies Home Journal, 72, pp. 48–49, August 1955.
7.
O'NeilJ. J., Enter Atomic Power, Harper's Magazine, 181, p. 7ff, June 1940.
8.
DavisH. M., We Enter a New Era, New York Times Magazine, p. 43, August 12, 1945.
9.
What Can the Atom Do For You?, Science Illustrated, 1, pp. 22–27, June 1946.
10.
Cheap Atomic Power in '60, Science News Letter, 51, p. 66, February 1, 1947.
11.
McDermottW. F., Bringing the Atom Down to Earth, Popular Mechanics, 84, pp. 1–6+, November 1945.
12.
CasselsL., Atomic Engines — When and How, Harper's Magazine, 200, p. 50, June 1950.
13.
LangerR. M., Fast New World, Collier's, 106, p. 54, July 6, 1940.
14.
LowA. M., What's Next with the Atom?, Popular Science Monthly, 147, p. 66, October 1945.
15.
LambrightW. H., Shooting Down the Nuclear Plane, Bobbs-Merril, Indianapolis, 1967.
16.
BaerH. S.Jr., Nuclear Power for Aircraft, Flying, 49, p. 25, June 1957.
17.
DavisH., Nucleonics Magazine, April 1961.
18.
Out of the Magic of A-Power: Things to Come, Newsweek, p. 69, September 19, 1960.
19.
LaurenceW. L., Is Atomic Energy the Key to Our Dreams?, Saturday Evening Post, 218, p. 41, March-April 1946.
20.
Atomic Research May End the World's Hunger, The Christian Century, 65, pp. 749–750, July 28, 1948.
21.
GilfillanS. C., The Atomic Bombshell, Survey Graphic, 34, p. 358, September 1945.
22.
TroanJ., Science Reporting — Today and Tomorrow, Science, 131, p. 1193, April 22, 1960.
23.
NovozhilovY. V. and RichardsonJ. G., Fifty Years After the Death of Flammarion, The Science Popularizer, Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 6, pp. 89–96, 1976.
24.
RichardsonJ. G., Science and Technology as Integral Parts of Out Culture: Interdisciplinary Responsibilities of the Scientific Communicator, Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 10:2, pp. 141–147, 1980.