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On the beach: British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)

Published

Standard

On the beach: British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end. / Baker, Brian.
Future wars: the anticipations and the fears. ed. / David Seed. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2012. p. 144-160.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)

Harvard

Baker, B 2012, On the beach: British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end. in D Seed (ed.), Future wars: the anticipations and the fears. Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, pp. 144-160.

APA

Baker, B. (2012). On the beach: British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end. In D. Seed (Ed.), Future wars: the anticipations and the fears (pp. 144-160). Liverpool University Press.

Vancouver

Baker B. On the beach: British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end. In Seed D, editor, Future wars: the anticipations and the fears. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. 2012. p. 144-160

Author

Baker, Brian. / On the beach : British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end. Future wars: the anticipations and the fears. editor / David Seed. Liverpool : Liverpool University Press, 2012. pp. 144-160

Bibtex

@inbook{e518137d02b4439c8ae4dcfa6b16ada0,
title = "On the beach: British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end",
abstract = "This chapter will consider the particularly British responses to the threat of nuclear annihilation in the Cold War. Where British Cold War genre fiction is often investigated in terms of espionage and the double agent in a late recapitulation of the {\textquoteleft}Great game{\textquoteright} of Empire, the critical response to British science fiction and nuclear war is under-regarded. This chapter will take as its primary case-study Nevil Shute{\textquoteright}s On the Beach (1957), which lenses the British post-war disaster novel (Aldiss{\textquoteright}s {\textquoteleft}cosy catastrophe{\textquoteright}) through a scenario where a group of men and women temporarily survive nuclear war in Australia (the place of Britain{\textquoteright}s own testing of atomic weapons and of its doomed participation in the Space Race). The chapter will analyse Shute{\textquoteright}s text, and others from the 1950s and 1960s which combine the Pacific island spaces of the end of British Empire (Golding{\textquoteright}s Lord of the Flies, Ballard{\textquoteright}s {\textquoteleft}The Terminal Beach{\textquoteright}) with the threat or actuality of nuclear conflict, to investigate the ideological and imagined connection between Britain{\textquoteright}s role in a global system of MAD and its negotiation of Empire{\textquoteright}s end. The chapter will end with a consideration of David Graham{\textquoteright}s Down to a Sunless Sea (1979) as a terminal reprise of the British disaster novel and its pessimistic envisioning of surviving catastrophe.",
keywords = "nuclear war, science fiction, Australia, colonization, Nevil Shute",
author = "Brian Baker",
year = "2012",
month = jun,
language = "English",
isbn = "9781846317552",
pages = "144--160",
editor = "David Seed",
booktitle = "Future wars",
publisher = "Liverpool University Press",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - On the beach

T2 - British nuclear fiction and the spaces of empire's end

AU - Baker, Brian

PY - 2012/6

Y1 - 2012/6

N2 - This chapter will consider the particularly British responses to the threat of nuclear annihilation in the Cold War. Where British Cold War genre fiction is often investigated in terms of espionage and the double agent in a late recapitulation of the ‘Great game’ of Empire, the critical response to British science fiction and nuclear war is under-regarded. This chapter will take as its primary case-study Nevil Shute’s On the Beach (1957), which lenses the British post-war disaster novel (Aldiss’s ‘cosy catastrophe’) through a scenario where a group of men and women temporarily survive nuclear war in Australia (the place of Britain’s own testing of atomic weapons and of its doomed participation in the Space Race). The chapter will analyse Shute’s text, and others from the 1950s and 1960s which combine the Pacific island spaces of the end of British Empire (Golding’s Lord of the Flies, Ballard’s ‘The Terminal Beach’) with the threat or actuality of nuclear conflict, to investigate the ideological and imagined connection between Britain’s role in a global system of MAD and its negotiation of Empire’s end. The chapter will end with a consideration of David Graham’s Down to a Sunless Sea (1979) as a terminal reprise of the British disaster novel and its pessimistic envisioning of surviving catastrophe.

AB - This chapter will consider the particularly British responses to the threat of nuclear annihilation in the Cold War. Where British Cold War genre fiction is often investigated in terms of espionage and the double agent in a late recapitulation of the ‘Great game’ of Empire, the critical response to British science fiction and nuclear war is under-regarded. This chapter will take as its primary case-study Nevil Shute’s On the Beach (1957), which lenses the British post-war disaster novel (Aldiss’s ‘cosy catastrophe’) through a scenario where a group of men and women temporarily survive nuclear war in Australia (the place of Britain’s own testing of atomic weapons and of its doomed participation in the Space Race). The chapter will analyse Shute’s text, and others from the 1950s and 1960s which combine the Pacific island spaces of the end of British Empire (Golding’s Lord of the Flies, Ballard’s ‘The Terminal Beach’) with the threat or actuality of nuclear conflict, to investigate the ideological and imagined connection between Britain’s role in a global system of MAD and its negotiation of Empire’s end. The chapter will end with a consideration of David Graham’s Down to a Sunless Sea (1979) as a terminal reprise of the British disaster novel and its pessimistic envisioning of surviving catastrophe.

KW - nuclear war

KW - science fiction

KW - Australia

KW - colonization

KW - Nevil Shute

M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)

SN - 9781846317552

SP - 144

EP - 160

BT - Future wars

A2 - Seed, David

PB - Liverpool University Press

CY - Liverpool

ER -