School of Historical and Philosophical Studies - Theses

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    Saturn and the Seeds of Evil: Spaceflight, Envirotechnical Thought, and Progress in 1960s and 1970s America
    Davison, Angus Edward ( 2023)
    During the 1960s and the 1970s, inspired by a growing awareness of the effects unbridled technological progress was having on themselves and their environment, a politically disparate group of Americans searched for new relationships with technology, the environment, and the notion of national progress. “Saturn and the Seeds of Evil” explores the differing conceptions of technological progress that were projected on to spaceflight during this period of contestation over the course of America’s, and often the whole Earth’s, future. Some, including the patriotically minded editors of Life magazine and the chemical-industrialist Robert White-Stevens, turned to spaceflight as a glittering example of technological progress to convince doubters that the nation’s course was safe. Others, including pioneering aviator Charles Lindbergh, his wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, physicist Gerard K. O’Neill, and alternative technology guru Stewart Brand, believed that space technology presented a path towards environmental salvation. “Saturn and the Seeds of Evil” uses three case studies to argue that at each stage of the 1960s, 1970s, and into the 1980s, spaceflight reinforced narratives of technological utopianism—the notion that technological progress is equivalent to societal progress—regardless of whether the visions of technological progress projected on to it were utopian or dystopian.