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We Begin Bombing in Five Minutes
1980s activist culture
1980s antiwar movements
1980s human rights activism
1980s political opposition
A01=Andrew Hunt
activist responses to U.S. militarism
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American activism against apartheid
American cultural rebels in the 1980s
American peace movement resurgence
anti-interventionist movements
anti-nuclear activism in the 1980s
Author_Andrew Hunt
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Central America intervention protests
Central American solidarity activism
Cold War cultural narratives
Cold War protest movements
Cold War satire and humor
COP=United States
cultural critiques of the Cold War
cultural history of Cold War America
cultural resistance in the 1980s
decade of greed reconsidered
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dissent against U.S. interventions
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film and television during the Cold War
global justice movements of the 1980s
grassroots campaigns against nuclear weapons
grassroots movements of the 1980s
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media and antiwar movements
media coverage of protest movements
nuclear arms race opposition
nuclear freeze campaigns
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political activism during Reagan years
pop culture and political resistance
popular culture as political critique
popular resistance to apartheid
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protest history of the Reagan era
protest music of the 1980s
protests against U.S. imperialism
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Reagan and the Evil Empire rhetoric
Reagan era dissent
Reagan era political backlash
Reagan's nuclear policies challenged
resistance to conservative politics
social history of Reagan's America
social movements and U.S. policy
softlaunch
U.S. foreign policy criticism
U.S. foreign policy debates in the 1980s
Product details
- ISBN 9781625345769
- Weight: 364g
- Dimensions: 151 x 226mm
- Publication Date: 30 Aug 2021
- Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
- Language: English
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In the moments before his weekly radio address hit the airwaves in 1984, Ronald Reagan made an off-the-record joke: 'I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes.' As reports of the stunt leaked to the press, many Americans did not find themselves laughing along with the president. Long a fervent warrior against what he termed the 'Evil Empire,' by the mid-1980s, Reagan confronted growing domestic opposition to his revival of the Cold War. While numerous histories of the era have glorified the 'Decade of Greed,' historian Andrew Hunt instead explores the period's robust political and cultural dissent.
We Begin Bombing in Five Minutes focuses on a striking array of protest movements that took up issues such as the nuclear arms race, U.S. intervention in Central America, and American investments in South Africa. Hunt's new history of the eighties investigates how film, television, and other facets of popular culture critiqued Washington's Cold War policies and reveals that activists and cultural rebels alike posed a more meaningful challenge to the Cold War's excesses than their predecessors in the McCarthy era.
We Begin Bombing in Five Minutes focuses on a striking array of protest movements that took up issues such as the nuclear arms race, U.S. intervention in Central America, and American investments in South Africa. Hunt's new history of the eighties investigates how film, television, and other facets of popular culture critiqued Washington's Cold War policies and reveals that activists and cultural rebels alike posed a more meaningful challenge to the Cold War's excesses than their predecessors in the McCarthy era.
Andrew Hunt is professor of history at the University of Waterloo and coauthor of Social History of the United States: The 1980s.
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