High: Anti-nuclear demonstration, Wall St., 1982, New York Metropolis (photograph by Gotfryd Bernard courtesy Library of Congress). Backside, left to proper: Anti-nuke rally in Harrisburg, [Pennsylvania] on the Capitol, 1979 (courtesy Wikimedia Commons); Three Mile Island personnel cleansing up radioactive contamination within the auxiliary constructing, Oct. 1979 (courtesy Wikimedia Commons); Folks carrying picket indicators protesting in opposition to nuclear energy and the Potomac Electrical Energy Firm (PEPCO), April 28, 1976 (photograph by Thomas J. O’Halloran, courtesy Library of Congress); Operation Buster-Jangle-Canine take a look at, with troops collaborating in train Desert Rock I, Nov. 1, 1951 (courtesy Wikimedia Commons).
As we method the eightieth anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Course of invitations proposals and submissions for an upcoming collection on nuclear historical past. We’re open to all kinds of subjects. This might embody items that contemplate useful resource extraction and capitalism; the environmental impacts of nuclear energy and weapons; the place of the US within the international nuclear order; the histories and afterlives of Hiroshima and Nagasaki; and nuclear narratives in U.S. political discourse and well-liked tradition.
We welcome submissions engaged in a spread of approaches and subfields, together with the historical past of science, expertise, and public well being, Native American and Indigenous Research, political economic system and labor, and ecology and environmentalism. We encourage items that undertake international, transnational, or comparative views and that join the historical past of nuclear energy with up to date points in the US and past.
We settle for submissions from anybody engaged within the follow of U.S. historical past, together with researchers, lecturers, graduate college students, archivists, curators, public historians, digital students, and others. Submissions needs to be written for a public readership and shouldn’t exceed 1,500 phrases, not counting any footnotes. Please ship proposals or submissions to weblog@oah.org by August 15, 2025.