The
Sputnik Shock
The 9/11 attacks caught Americans by surprise – and led them
to question many things they had previously taken for granted. But
while 9/11 was singularly destructive, another event in history,
50 years ago was similarly disconcerting to most Americans. Just
when Americans were feeling self-confident and optimistic about
the future, along came the crude, kerosene-powered Sputnik launch
in October 1957. The space race was underway and the Soviets had
won the first leg. The United States was agog and unnerved.
To make matters worse, Sputnik appeared at a moment when America
was anxious on several fronts. For starters, the bottom had fallen
out of a seemingly indestructible economic boom. Stock prices, which
had started to falter in the summer, had been dropping steadily
in September 1957.
The Dow had dropped 21% in value since July 12, 1957, and the bull
market that had been in place for more than three years was now
over. A recession was in full swing. Personal and business incomes
were both down for the year and unemployment was on the rise.
At the same time, social changes were beginning to transform the
United States. A great struggle to achieve a more egalitarian society
was beginning. The first civil rights legislation since Reconstruction
had been enacted in Congress on September 9, 1957,less than a month
before Sputnik’s launch.
Add to that the appearance of Sputnik and it becomes clear why there
was a sudden crisis of confidence in U.S. technology, values, politics
and the military.
Science, technology and engineering were totally reworked and massively
funded in the shadow of Sputnik.
Gabriel Heatter, an influential news commentator for the Mutual
Broadcasting System, delivered a radio editorial titled “Thank
You, Mr. Sputnik” in January 1958, hours after Sputnik I had
fallen from orbit.
After reporting its demise, he addressed an object that no longer
existed: “You will never know how big a noise you made. You
gave us a shock which hit many people as hard as Pearl Harbour.
You hit our pride a frightful blow. You suddenly made us realize
that we are not the best in everything.”
“You reminded us of old-fashioned American word humility.
You woke us up out of a long sleep. You made us realize a nation
can talk too much, too long, too hard about money. A nation, like
a man, can grow soft and complacent. It can fall behind when it
thinks it is Number One in everything. Comrade Sputnik, you taught
us more about the Russians in one hour than we had learned in 40
years.”
The Russian satellite essentially forced the United States to place
a new national priority on research science, which led to the development
of microelectronics the technology used in today’s laptop,
personal and handheld computers.
Many essential technologies of modern life, including the Internet,
owe their early development to the accelerated pace of applied research
triggered by Sputnik. On another level, Sputnik affected national
attitudes toward conspicuous consumption, symbolically killing off
the market for the Edsel Automobile and the decadent automotive
tail fin. It was argued that the engineering talents of the nation
were being wasted on frivolities.
Ford’s Edsel, which had been introduced the month before,
with its odd oval puckered mouth grille centrepiece, was hardly
the only example of excess at this time of dazzling grilles, festooned
chrome trim, big V-8 engines and three-toned paintjobs. The Cadillac
epitomized the “American Dream Car” which was so big
and so thirsty for fuel that it averaged only ten miles per gallon.
A higher standard of living, prior to the arrival of Sputnik, was
seen as prima facie evidence of American superiority over Russian
communism. It now became an emblem of national inferiority.
America’s editorial writers had a field day, filling their
pages with articles whose theme was the superficiality of much of
U.S. technical “progress.”
In the wake of Sputnik, America’s self-deprecation was boundless.
While some instant experts blamed the schools for not emphasizing
science and math, many others charged that the nation’s materialistic
society was somehow responsible for its loss of technological superiority.
The U.S. public immediately began to learn more about rockets and
satellites. Russian rocket literature was largely unknown in the
West, although any Russian could read the work of Western rocket
experts. Many wondered what held it up. Schoolteachers, reporters
and editorialists found themselves dipping into the theories and
laws of Sir Isaac Newton, who was the first one to explain almost
300 years earlier how a satellite could work.
Charles Darwin and his 1859 theory of evolution had been successfully
kept out of many classrooms until late 1957. Only when Sputnik panicked
the scientific establishment did the theory of evolution find a
place in high school biology textbooks.
Schools now placed new emphasis on the process of inquiry, independent
thinking and the challenging of long-held assumptions. Laboratory
science was stressed, urging a hands-on learning approach. The emphasis
moved from teaching facts to fundamental principles. America’s
children could no longer be educated traditionally. Language labs
and fluency in modern languages became the order of the day.
Beyond education and research, Sputnik also changed people’s
lives in ways that eventually filtered into modern popular culture.
Sputnik was the instrument that gave Stephen King the “dread”
that fuels his novels, caused the prolific Isaac Asimov to begin
calling himself a science writer rather than a science fiction writer,
inspired Ross Perot to create an electronics dynasty, and led others
to become cosmonauts and astronauts. On this issue, Paul Dickson
wrote very informative book entitled “Sputnik: The Shock of
the Century.” 2001. Go for it.
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