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Conclusion. Histories of Extreme Environments beyond the Cold War

  • Julia Herzberg , Christian Kehrt and Franziska Torma
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Ice and Snow in the Cold War
This chapter is in the book Ice and Snow in the Cold War
© 2022, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

© 2022, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Illustrations vii
  4. Introductions
  5. Exploring Ice and Snow in the Cold War 1
  6. Cryo-history: Ice, Snow, and the Great Acceleration 20
  7. Part I. Science: Sites of Knowledge
  8. Chapter 1. Snow and Avalanche Research as Patriotic Duty? Th e Institutionalization of a Scientifi c Discipline in Switzerland 47
  9. Chapter 2. “An Orgy of Hypothesizing”: Th e Construction of Glaciological Knowledge in Cold War America 69
  10. Chapter 3. “Camp Century” and “Project Iceworm”: Greenland as a Stage for US Military Service Rivalries 89
  11. Chapter 4. Inuit Responses to Arctic Militarization: Examples from East Greenland 109
  12. Part II. Politics of Confrontation and Cooperation
  13. Chapter 5. Creating Open Territorial Rights in Cold and Icy Places: Cold War Rivalries and the Antarctic and Outer Space Treaties 137
  14. Chapter 6. An Environment Too Extreme? Th e Case of Bouvetøya 163
  15. Chapter 7. Managing the “White Death” in Cold War Soviet Union: Snow Avalanches, Ice Science, and Winter Sports in Kazakhstan, 1960s–1980s 189
  16. Part III. Cultures and Narratives of Ice and Snow
  17. Chapter 8. Laboratory Metaphors in Antarctic History: From Nature to Space 209
  18. Chapter 9. Cold War Creatures: Soviet Science and the Problem of the Abominable Snowman 236
  19. Chapter 10. Negotiating “Coldness”: Th e Natural Environment and Community Cohesion in Cold War Molotovsk-Severodvinsk 253
  20. Chapter 11. An Exploration of the Self: Reinhold Messner’s Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1989 285
  21. Conclusion. Histories of Extreme Environments beyond the Cold War 309
  22. Index 318
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