Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Special Relationship and the British Hypothesis: The Black Laurel, The Third Man, Cold War Vienna and Berlin
- 2 Cold War on the 1930s and Sacrificial Naming: John Dos Passos and Josephine Herbst
- 3 DEW Line, Uranium and the Arctic Cold War: Ginsberg's Kaddish and Nabokov's Lolita
- 4 Cold War Sex War, Or the Other Being Inside: Burroughs, Paley, Plath, Hughes
- 5 The Sacrificial Logic of the Asian Cold War: Greene's The Quiet American and McCarthy's The Seventeenth Degree
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Special Relationship and the British Hypothesis: The Black Laurel, The Third Man, Cold War Vienna and Berlin
- 2 Cold War on the 1930s and Sacrificial Naming: John Dos Passos and Josephine Herbst
- 3 DEW Line, Uranium and the Arctic Cold War: Ginsberg's Kaddish and Nabokov's Lolita
- 4 Cold War Sex War, Or the Other Being Inside: Burroughs, Paley, Plath, Hughes
- 5 The Sacrificial Logic of the Asian Cold War: Greene's The Quiet American and McCarthy's The Seventeenth Degree
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In June 2004, I took my daughters down ‘Scotland's Secret Bunker’ at Troywood, Anstruther, in Fife. Disguised as a Scottish farmhouse, and concealed underground at the end of a 150m tunnel, it was built in the 1950s as one of the regional government HQs for the Scottish secretary and his ministry in case of nuclear emergency. As we walked through the spooky bunkered spaces with their antique machinery of war communications, my young daughters shrank from the sinister horror of it all. They refused to leave the only sunny space down there, a concrete room given over to the anti-nuclear movement, with colourful Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) posters, rainbows and chains of friendly hands. Their reaction made me ashamed of the boyish thrill that had led me to lure my family down there in the first place, all the allure of wartime technology, the rockets and guns on display, the blastproof doors, the Ops room intricacies, the labyrinthine underworld with its concrete imagining of survival by the very few.
By strange coincidence, the week of our visit saw a spectral enactment of my own shame in the form of Ronald MacDonald, a homeless paranoid schizophrenic. On 8 June he used a JCB digger to crash into the bunker after midnight – he stayed down there, in what the papers were to call the Bunker Siege, for two whole days and nights.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Literary Cold War 1945 to Vietnam , pp. 1 - 18Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2009