{"title":"冷战后期洛杉矶反核艺术的地形","authors":"Michelle Moravec","doi":"10.1179/JRL.2010.6.1.58","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"With the tenth anniversary of the end of the Cold War drawing near, museums around the world mounted exhibitions that focused on the cultural aspect of the conflict. From the Victoria and Albert Museum in London to the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art , almost all considerations of culture in the Cold War focus on the first two decades. The periodisation of these exhibitions reflects the dominant trend in scholarship, which centres on the years in which the slow simmer conflict experienced frequent flare ups. Studies of Cold War culture take one of two tacks, exploring the impact of the bomb on manifestations of culture, such as art, literature and film, as well as fashion, design, and everyday aesthetics. Another school concentrates on the ways that high art was pressed into diplomatic service during the Cold War. This narrative strand ties the formalist concerns that dominated aesthetics to the zeitgeist of the Cold War. Since very little political content could be imputed to non-figurative or non-realist art, the story goes, this art made the perfect expression of American culture for use by cold warrior administrations. In recent years, both accounts of culture in the Cold War have received considerable elaboration in some finely wrought studies. However, the focus still remains on the 1950s and early 1960s, with the rare work moving past the Cuban Missile Crisis. The influential historian of the Cold War, Charles S Meier, divides the long conflict into eight epochs. The lengthy period of dormancy in the 1970s, which Meier characterizes as 'domestic reform and detente' resulted in a decline in the Cold War cultural battles. It also coincided with the fading of the first wave of anti-nuclear activism, as Paul Boyer has persuasively demonstrated in his analysis of the trajectory of anti-nuclear protests. By the 1960s, the American public had lost interest in the issue.","PeriodicalId":299529,"journal":{"name":"The International Journal of Regional and Local Studies","volume":"53 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Topographies of Anti-Nuclear Art in Late Cold War Los Angeles\",\"authors\":\"Michelle Moravec\",\"doi\":\"10.1179/JRL.2010.6.1.58\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"With the tenth anniversary of the end of the Cold War drawing near, museums around the world mounted exhibitions that focused on the cultural aspect of the conflict. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
随着冷战结束十周年的临近,世界各地的博物馆都举办了以这场冲突的文化方面为重点的展览。从伦敦的维多利亚和阿尔伯特博物馆(Victoria and Albert Museum)到洛杉矶当代艺术博物馆(Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art),几乎所有关于冷战时期文化的思考都集中在前二十年。这些展览的阶段性反映了学术研究的主流趋势,主要集中在缓慢酝酿的冲突经历频繁爆发的年份。对冷战文化的研究采取两种方式之一,探索原子弹对文化表现形式的影响,如艺术、文学和电影,以及时尚、设计和日常美学。另一个学派关注的是高雅艺术在冷战期间被施加到外交服务中的方式。这种叙事链将主导美学的形式主义关注与冷战的时代精神联系在一起。由于很少有政治内容可以归因于非具象或非现实主义艺术,故事是这样的,这种艺术完美地表达了美国文化,供冷战时期的政府使用。近年来,这两种关于冷战时期文化的说法在一些精心制作的研究中得到了相当多的阐述。然而,重点仍然集中在20世纪50年代和60年代初,这些罕见的作品超越了古巴导弹危机。颇具影响力的冷战历史学家查尔斯·S·迈耶(Charles S Meier)将这场漫长的冲突分为八个时期。Meier将20世纪70年代的漫长休眠期描述为“国内改革和缓和”,这导致了冷战文化斗争的减少。正如保罗·博耶(Paul Boyer)在他对反核抗议运动轨迹的分析中令人信服地证明的那样,这也与第一波反核行动主义的消退相吻合。到了20世纪60年代,美国公众对这个问题失去了兴趣。
Topographies of Anti-Nuclear Art in Late Cold War Los Angeles
With the tenth anniversary of the end of the Cold War drawing near, museums around the world mounted exhibitions that focused on the cultural aspect of the conflict. From the Victoria and Albert Museum in London to the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art , almost all considerations of culture in the Cold War focus on the first two decades. The periodisation of these exhibitions reflects the dominant trend in scholarship, which centres on the years in which the slow simmer conflict experienced frequent flare ups. Studies of Cold War culture take one of two tacks, exploring the impact of the bomb on manifestations of culture, such as art, literature and film, as well as fashion, design, and everyday aesthetics. Another school concentrates on the ways that high art was pressed into diplomatic service during the Cold War. This narrative strand ties the formalist concerns that dominated aesthetics to the zeitgeist of the Cold War. Since very little political content could be imputed to non-figurative or non-realist art, the story goes, this art made the perfect expression of American culture for use by cold warrior administrations. In recent years, both accounts of culture in the Cold War have received considerable elaboration in some finely wrought studies. However, the focus still remains on the 1950s and early 1960s, with the rare work moving past the Cuban Missile Crisis. The influential historian of the Cold War, Charles S Meier, divides the long conflict into eight epochs. The lengthy period of dormancy in the 1970s, which Meier characterizes as 'domestic reform and detente' resulted in a decline in the Cold War cultural battles. It also coincided with the fading of the first wave of anti-nuclear activism, as Paul Boyer has persuasively demonstrated in his analysis of the trajectory of anti-nuclear protests. By the 1960s, the American public had lost interest in the issue.