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Remembering the Bomb: The Fiftieth Anniversary in the United States and Japan

Patriotic orthodoxy and U.S. decline

Pages 19-25 | Published online: 05 Jul 2019

References

  • Correll, John , 1994. "War Stories at Air and Space". In: Air Force Magazine . 1994. pp. 26–26, Giese quoted in “Enola Gay Baiting,” Washington City Paper, 27 Sept. 1994, p. 8.
  • 1995. "Hiroshima: A Controversy that Refuses to Die". In: New York Times . 1995.
  • Sherry, Michael , 1987. " Enola Gay Baiting". In: The Rise of American Air Power: The Creation of Armageddon . New Haven, CT: Yale University Press; 1987, p. 8. On dominant frameworks in 1945, see, chaps. 9-10.
  • Linenthal, Edward Tabor , 1989. "War and Sacrifice in the Nuclear Age: The Committee on the Present Danger and the Renewal of Martial Enthusiasm". In: Chernus, Ira , Linenthal, Edward Tabor , , ed. A Shuddering Dawn: Religious Studies and the Nuclear Age . Albany, NY: State University of New York Press; 1989, in, and Karal Ann Marling and John Wetenhall, Iwo Jima: Monuments, Memories, and the American Hero (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1991).
  • Leonard, Thomas , 1978. Above the Battle: War-Making in America from Appomattox to Versailles . New York: Oxford University Press; 1978. pp. 148–148.
  • Schmitt, Eric , 1995. Somalia's First Lesson for Military is Caution , New York Times (1995).
  • Remnick, David , 1994. "Lost in Space". In: New Yorker . 1994. pp. 86–86.
  • 1995. "Orange County Register". In: New York Times . 1995, as reprinted in the.
  • Correll, John , "the commemorative voice and the historical voice". In: Air Force Magazine , as if the former cannot be historical and the latter cannot be commemorative. Writing for the, certainly showed some grasp of the history of both 1945 events and the museum's later travails, and patriots did remember something real-the relief most Americans felt that the war was over and that more Americans would not die in it. By the same token, professional historians disagree about how to interpret the 1945 record and often seek to commemorate something. The distinction lies more in what the various parties want to commemorate-victory, the war's end, the saving of lives; or destruction, the dangers of racial hostility, the advent of the nuclear arms race. Professionalhistorians were in the right about most issues in the Enola Gay debate, but Linenthal's distinction, like my term “patriotic culture,” must be used with caution..
  • Enola Gay Baiting . pp. 8–8.
  • Bull, Chris , 1993. "Right Turn". In: The Advocate . 1993.
  • 1995. "Arkansas Democrat-Gazette". In: New York Times . 1995, reprinted in the, political cartoon for the Orlando Sentinel (circa Jan.-Feb. 1995); political cartoon for the San Francisco Chronicle, 31 Jan. 1995.
  • 1995. "Anti-Flag-Burning Drive Begins: Veterans Rally in Support of Constitutional Amendment". In: Chicago Tribune . 1995.
  • Linenthal, Edward Tabor , 1991. Sacred Ground: Americans and Their Battlefields . Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press; 1991.
  • 1995. The Practice of American History . 1995, at the Organization of American Historians convention.

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