1. Advanced literacy in the regional tradition of historical and cultural studies of nuclear technologies and development in the United States, and the role of New Mexico in particular, as well as the complex moral, political, economic, and environmental...Read more
“Atomic America” is an undergraduate general education (“Gen Ed”) course that was originally designed and delivered by the historian Ferenc Morton Szasz at the University of New Mexico (UNM). The historian of science Luis Campos has since inherited and revitalized the course at UNM, which...Read more
The second part of the course was focused on two collaborative case studies that were selected in advance by the instructor because they mark the beginning and the end of the life cycle of nuclear development, from uranium mining to nuclear weapons testing in New Mexico. A life cycle...Read more
Our approach to teaching Atomic America was divided into two parts. The first part of the course was dedicated to a survey of the literature and class discussions. Students compiled weekly reading annotations based on a shared set of questions ( ...Read more
This section is still being written and revised in coordination with colleagues from UNM METALS SRP, NMT CLASS, B-EiJ Teaching Collective, and the Radiation Governance Project in the Disaster STS Network. It will be published after a series of online onferences and workshops....Read more
Our approach to teaching Atomic America sought to nuance the traditional curriculum in five intersecting ways:
1. Through an interdisciplinary approach, we read across the disciplines of history, anthropology, geography, geology, ecology, and...Read more
What follows are the general instructions for student implementation of the first collaborative case study :
Recall your reading of McLemore (2010). The "Grants...Read more
Proposed Atomic America syllabus prior to student feedback and revisions.Read more