Award Date
May 2018
Degree Type
Thesis
Degree Name
Master of Arts (MA)
Department
History
First Committee Member
Andrew Kirk
Second Committee Member
William Bauer
Third Committee Member
Marcia Gallo
Fourth Committee Member
William Ramsey
Number of Pages
109
Abstract
This thesis analyzes how environmental perceptions of the American West at the intersections of nature and technology shaped vital decisions regarding the space race. The analysis is first contextualized by pervasive political ideologies of the Cold War, which elucidates how these firmly held beliefs turned into political actions and transformed the post-World War II arms race into the space race. The author next examines the technological sublime, an awe-inspiring experience arising in people when they view impressive feats of massive, powerful, human-built machines, in this case nuclear bombs, and rockets. Where the nuclear bomb’s destructive capabilities eventually turned many Americans away from the sublime, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) rockets offered an exciting expansion of space, allowing the US to conceive of the Moon as a future new territory. These technologies developed in the American West and the author analyzes how NASA used one site in particular, the Nevada Test Site (NTS) to develop nuclear thermal rockets at the Nuclear Rocket Development Station (NRDS) and train Apollo astronauts in nuclear craters. The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) controlled NTS perpetuated popular misconceptions of the desert as barren and lifeless, and thus only useful for testing new, potentially destructive forces of energy, and further ingrained the space race with the American West frontier mythology. Finally, this thesis examines how the western frontier mythology and environmental perceptions also influenced decisions in the East, particularly the one to choose Florida’s Merritt Island as the launch site for the Apollo program. Cape Canaveral contained vast open, oceanic spaces and was relatively little populated. The ability to use each of these sites, the NTS and the KSC, in the manner the US wanted required the same thing that the American West did: massive, innovative, and powerful technology with the ability to reshape the landscape.
Keywords
American West; Cold War; Cultural Geography; Environmental History; Science and Technology; Space Race
Disciplines
History | United States History
File Format
Degree Grantor
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Language
English
Repository Citation
Marino, William, "Outer Space in a Western Place: How Environmental Perceptions of the American West Shaped the Space Race" (2018). UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. 3284.
http://dx.doi.org/10.34917/13568566
Rights
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