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Jonathan Schell: The Fate of the Earth, The Abolition, The Unconquerable World (LOA#329) (Library of America)
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75 years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, a collected edition of three classic accounts of our nuclear predicament and the way forward to a peaceful world, by the Rachel Carson of the antiwar movement.Brave, eloquent, and controversial, these classic works by Jonathan Schell illuminate the nuclear threat to our civilization, and envision a way forward to peace. In The Fate of the Earthan international bestseller that inspired the nuclear freeze movementSchell distills the best available scientific and technical information to imagine the apocalyptic aftereffects of nuclear war. Dramatizing the stakes involved in abstract discussions of military strategy, when first published it galvanized public consciousness and changed the terms of the debate over nuclear arms. The Abolition extends this work to argueagainst a complacent acceptance of the stability of the nuclear world and conventional theories of deterrencethat pathways to disarmament exist, and that the ultimate elimination of nuclear weapons is an achievable goal. The volume concludes with what is arguably Schells masterwork, The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People. A sweeping, surprisingly hopeful historical analysis of the changing nature of warfare, both nuclear and conventional, through the end of the twentieth century, it argues that war has become less and less useful as a means for achieving political ends, culminating in the mutually assured destruction of the Cold War. Describing the worldhistorical successes of peoples revolutionsthe Gandhian defeat of British imperialism in India and the peaceful dissolution of the Soviet Union, among othersSchell envisions new political and social foundations on which to sustain a lasting peace.
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