[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.]
What two very
different historical novels help us see about the Trinity project.
In yesterday’s
post, I highlighted the complicated, crucial role that the Trinity site plays
in the
closing pages of Leslie Marmon Silko’s postmodern, Native American, unique
and amazing historical
novel Ceremony (1977). Silko does
more with her Trinity section than highlight the stolen tribal holy lands on
which the test site was located, however (vital of a task as that undoubtedly
is). At the climax of her description of the Trinity site and what it helps her
protagonist Tayo see and understand for the first time, Silko writes with
eloquence and anger about the ironic but unquestionable way that the atomic
bomb had brought the world closer together and back to a more primal truth: “From
that time on, human beings were one clan again, united by the fate the
destroyers had planned for all of them, for all living things; united by a
circle of death that devoured people in cities twelve thousand miles away,
victims who had never known these mesas, who had never seen the delicate colors
of the rocks which boiled up their slaughter.”
In this passage,
as in so many moments and elements in Ceremony,
Silko makes plain that her novel is anything but limited to Native American
themes or histories (central to it as they certainly are). Like Tayo here,
Silko recognizes the fundamental, crucial connections between seemingly distant
and divided people and places, stories and communities, identities and
histories. In ushering in the atomic age and the Cold War, Trinity exemplified
some of the most threatening and destructive such connections, the ways in
which we humans can bring the destroyers’ planned fate (whether with bombs,
cultural and economic exploitations, or in so many other ways) to other cultures
near and far (as well, of course, as to our own communities and the planet on
which we all live). Yet at the same time, Tayo and Silko acknowledge through
the repetition of “united” here, moments and histories like Trinity allow us to
consider what we all share, to see the possibilities for communal human
experience that are not limited to particular cultural or national borders and
boundaries (since the bomb, like the rocks out of which its uranium came, knows
and cares nothing about such divisions).
Acknowledging
and engaging with such connections isn’t easy, however, nor is it necessarily
entertaining (a word that has likely never been applied to Silko’s dense and
demanding first novel). In order to create a much more entertaining genre fiction
in his own first novel, the historical mystery/thriller Los Alamos
(1997), author Joseph Kanon elides many of those social, cultural, and human
questions in service of a compelling but ultimately slight plot. Kanon’s novel
is set in the months leading up to the Trinity test, and even includes a
description of that event; but as Lawrence
Thornton writes in his New York Times review
of the book, Kanon “has carefully subordinated his more serious intentions, as
well as the inherent complexity of his material, to the demands of nonstop
action.” As I hope has been made amply clear in this space, I have nothing
whatsoever against genre
or popular fiction; but in writing more of a period
novel than a truly historical one, Kanon both misses that chance for
greater complexity and offers a far more neatly resolved engagement with the
dark and disturbing histories comprised by Los Alamos and Trinity.
Next Trinity
connection tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
Well, now I have something new on my reading list (as if it weren't already long enough). Thanks!
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