[On July 16,
1945, the first
atomic bomb was tested at Trinity Site, New Mexico, an explosion with numerous
aftereffects and meanings. This week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of such
Trinity connections, leading up to a special weekend post on a foreign film
that’s also profoundly American.]
Three ways to AmericanStudy one of the world’s most important and
controversial laboratories.
The central laboratory in the Manhattan
Project, the World War II program through which the
United States developed the first atomic bombs, was located in Los Alamos, New Mexico for a very
specific reason: J. Robert Oppenheimer loved the area. Oppenheimer, the physicist who would become the
laboratory’s first director and the so-called “father of the atomic bomb,” had
traveled to New Mexico at the age of 18 to recover from a devastating illness
and had, like yesterday’s artists and so many other visitors (including a
certain 13 year old AmericanStudier during his family’s national park vacation)
fallen in love with the place. By 1942, when he was selected to head the Manhattan
Project, Oppenheimer owned a horse ranch near Los Alamos, and his familiarity
with the area, coupled no doubt with his sense of how conducive it would be to
privacy and secrecy, led him to recommend it as the laboratory’s site. So on
one key level, Los Alamos reflects the complex and often contradictory personality of its first and most famous director.
The selection of Los Alamos and New Mexico for that site also engendered at
least one more deeply ironic contradiction. Oppenheimer’s love for the area was
due in no small measure to its spectacular landscapes; the Southwest is like
nothing else in America, and, as Willa Cather captures so perfectly in her
historical novel Death Comes for
the Archbishop (1927), its mesas and
canyons can capture for life the heart and soul of any visitor. Yet it was
precisely that wild and open landscape that made the area ideal for not only
the Los Alamos laboratory but also its culminating moment: the Trinity test, the July 16th,
1945 first explosion of an atomic bomb. Perhaps the test site near Alamagordo,
in the Jornada del Muerto Valley, was indeed uninhabited and available for such
an explosion—but even if that were the case, the denotation without question destroyed thousands of square miles of Southwestern landscape,
flora, and fauna, and permanently affected and altered whatever was left behind. I don’t believe the cliché that we always hurt the ones
we love, but in Oppenheimer’s case, his choice certainly damaged the place he
loved.
Moreover, I’m not entirely convinced that the Trinity site was as
uninhabited as the Manhattan Project’s planners believed. In the climactic
section of her novel Ceremony (1977), just a few pages from the amazing conclusion about which I have blogged before, Leslie Marmon Silko locates her protagonist Tayo close
enough to the Trinity site (in not only geography but also, as a World War II
veteran, chronology and experience) that he can reflect on its status as yet
another theft and destruction of sacred tribal lands by the U.S. government. To
be clear, the Jornada del Muerto Valley had not belonged to Tayo’s Laguna
Pueblo people, nor any other Native American tribe, for some time, making that
theft and destruction more metaphorical and overarching than immediate or
legal. But as many of my posts this week will highlight, the simple fact is
that Southwestern land has been contested and cohabitated for centuries, and
certainly remained that way into the era of the Trinity test. Los Alamos, that
is, is as Mexican American as its name suggests and as Native American as all
of New Mexico, making the Manhattan Project likewise emblematic of the American
project at its worst and best.
Next Trinity connection
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
No comments:
Post a Comment