Saturday, January 7, 2023: 11:10 AM
Regency Ballroom A (Loews Philadelphia Hotel)
The “Cold War” is a term coined to describe a period of tense relations between the United States and the Soviet Union short of
direct military engagement. One historian has even dubbed the Cold War as a “long peace” due to the absence of Great Power
warfare in the second half of the twentieth century. In recent years, however, scholars have challenged such a view of the Cold
War from the centers of power, calling attention to the extraordinary brutality of “proxy wars” that killed millions of people in the
Third World. The perspective of the Anthropocene reveals yet another way in which the Cold War was no less violent than actual
conflicts, albeit with an important twist. From 1945 to 1980, the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France, and China
detonated hundreds of nuclear weapons aboveground and underwater to develop and upgrade their nuclear forces. This
undertaking by the Great Powers to keep the Cold War “cold” through nuclear deterrence generated a massive amount of
radioactive debris that spread all over the world. The resulting global and deep-time contamination, however, systematically
obscured its own health effects by displacing them across time and space. This paradox of scale, intrinsic to the Anthropocene,
meant that the fallout victims did not simply exist “out there” to count but rather had to be methodically conceived of on the ever-
changing matrix of science, ethics, social relations, and geopolitics. This contested socio-epistemic construction of victimhood was
essential to recasting the seemingly innocuous phenomenon of global fallout as a form of violence to be confronted and stopped
internationally. In this sense, the Cold War was an Anthropocenic war - a type of armed conflict which actually kills people through
the workings of the Earth System with impunity.
direct military engagement. One historian has even dubbed the Cold War as a “long peace” due to the absence of Great Power
warfare in the second half of the twentieth century. In recent years, however, scholars have challenged such a view of the Cold
War from the centers of power, calling attention to the extraordinary brutality of “proxy wars” that killed millions of people in the
Third World. The perspective of the Anthropocene reveals yet another way in which the Cold War was no less violent than actual
conflicts, albeit with an important twist. From 1945 to 1980, the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France, and China
detonated hundreds of nuclear weapons aboveground and underwater to develop and upgrade their nuclear forces. This
undertaking by the Great Powers to keep the Cold War “cold” through nuclear deterrence generated a massive amount of
radioactive debris that spread all over the world. The resulting global and deep-time contamination, however, systematically
obscured its own health effects by displacing them across time and space. This paradox of scale, intrinsic to the Anthropocene,
meant that the fallout victims did not simply exist “out there” to count but rather had to be methodically conceived of on the ever-
changing matrix of science, ethics, social relations, and geopolitics. This contested socio-epistemic construction of victimhood was
essential to recasting the seemingly innocuous phenomenon of global fallout as a form of violence to be confronted and stopped
internationally. In this sense, the Cold War was an Anthropocenic war - a type of armed conflict which actually kills people through
the workings of the Earth System with impunity.
See more of: Energizing Histories
See more of: The Anthropocene versus Climate Change as Historical Frameworks
See more of: AHA Sessions
See more of: The Anthropocene versus Climate Change as Historical Frameworks
See more of: AHA Sessions