'Brilliantly framed with deeply researched and consistently insightful essays ranging from popular culture and media, and activist efforts to create nuclear free zones to how nuclear anxiety changes domestic and foreign policy in the United States and Europe, Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear and the Cold War of the 1980s is indispensable reading for anyone seeking to understand the 1980s. The volume will shape the field for years to come.'
Penny M. von Eschen - Cornell University, New York
'Ranging from the US to Central Europe, the contributions in this exciting volume focus on the nature of grass roots activism and the challenge for high politics that ultimately contributed to avoiding an atomic catastrophe by a renewal of detente. Even if the collection produces more questions than answers, it is a must read for anyone concerned with preventing the use of nuclear weapons.'
Konrad H. Jarausch - University of North Carolina
'The ‘Second’ Cold War of the 1980s was truly a transnational phenomenon, both within the policy circles where it was launched and among the European and American citizens who experienced and reacted to it. This extraordinary volume brings together a wide range of political, cultural, and social aspects of this frightening era, and offers new approaches, sources, and insights for understanding the events of this time. It is a major contribution to the scholarship on the trans-Atlantic 1980s.'
Thomas Schwartz - Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
'Anxiety about nuclear weapons and nuclear energy permeated western politics and culture in the 1980s. These path-breaking essays, based on exciting new research by a brilliant cohort of historians, demonstrate that such anxieties prompted powerful anti-nuclear movements that altered the course of world politics and global culture in this crucial decade. This book is an outstanding and innovative collection.'
William I. Hitchcock - University of Virginia
'The new edited work Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear and the Cold War of the 1980s … is a welcome addition to the existing literature on the history of the 1980s and anti-nuclear activism.'
Christian Peterson
Source: Journal of Contemporary History
‘Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear, and the Cold War of the 1980s … follows a well-established line of research … the book succeeds in its aim to consistently link popular public discourse and concrete high politics.’
Karena Kalmbach
Source: Comparativ