GOOGLE BLOGS ALERT
Paul Dickson's
Sputnik: The Shock of The Century had a great interview on
Focus 580!
On October 4, 1957, as Leave It to Beaver premiered on
American television, the Soviet Union launched the space age.
Sputnik, all of 184 pounds with only a radio
transmitter inside its highly polished shell, became the first
man-made object in space; while it immediately shocked the
world, its long-term impact was even greater, for it profoundly
changed the shape of the twentieth century.
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In Sputnik, Washington journalist Paul Dickson chronicles
the dramatic events and developments leading up to and emanating
from Sputnik's launch. Supported by groundbreaking,
original research and many recently declassified documents,
Sputnik offers a fascinating profile of the early
American and Soviet space programs and a strikingly revised
picture of the politics and personalities behind the facade of
America's fledgling efforts to get into space.
Although Sputnik was unmanned, its story is intensely
human. Sputnik owed its success to many people, from the
earlier visionary, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, whose theories were
ahead of their time, to the Soviet spokesmen strategically
positioned around the world on the day the satellite was
launched, who created one of the greatest public-relations
events of all time. Its chief designer, howeverthe
brilliant Sergei Korolevremained a Soviet state secret
until after his death.
Equally hidden from view was the political intrigue dominating
America's early space program, as the military services jockeyed
for control and identity in a peacetime world. For years,
former Nazi Wernher von Braun, who ran the U.S. Army's missile
program, lobbied incessantly that his Rocket Team should be
handed responsibility for the first Earth-orbiting satellite.
He was outraged that Sputnik beat him and America into
space. For his part, President Eisenhower was secretly pleased
that the Russians had launched first, because by orbiting over
the United States Sputnik established the principle of
"freedom of space" that could justify the spy
satellites he thought essential to monitor Soviet missile
buildup. As Dickson reveals, Eisenhower was, in fact, much more
a master of the Sputnik crisis than he appeared to be at
the time and in subsequent accounts.
The U.S. public reaction to Sputnik was monumental. In a
single weekend, Americans were wrenched out of a mood of
national smugness and post-war material comfort. Initial shock
at and fear of the Soviets' intentions galvanized the country
and swiftly prompted innovative developments that define our
world today. Sputnik directly or indirectly influenced
nearly every aspect of American life, from the demise of the
suddenly superfluous tail fin and an immediate shift towards
science in the classroom to the arms race that defined the cold
war, the competition to reach the Moon, and the birth of the
Internet.
By shedding new light on a pivotal era, Paul Dickson expands our
knowledge of the world we now inhabit, and reminds us that the
story of Sputnik goes far beyond technology and the
beginning of the space age, and that its implications are still
being felt today.