Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 1, Winter 2007 | Page 32

28 Popular Culture Review very healthy. They loaf and sleep during the midday heat, but are active enough in the early morning and after 3 p.m.^ The next passage is remarkable not for its condescension (their language is, of course, “simple”), but for how it links language, knowledge, imperialism, and modernity. A few [natives] could read and write their simple language, and Juda, the local chief, could speak and understand a little English. The outside world they knew little about, and cared less. Then the U.S. Navy decided that Bikini was the place to test the atomic bomb, and almost overnight the natives found themselves in the Atomic Age.”*^ Markwith’s description reminds me of Thomas Pynchon’s definition of a miracle: one world’s intrusion into another. Markwith explains that he staged some of the shooting of his documentary and this provides an interesting, if unintentional, commentary on the creative nature of the enterprise.^ According to Markwith, There was the usual discussion over camera and light angles, the concealment of microphones, the placement of “stars” and “extras,” with much peering through a viewfinder and a great deal of shouting and running about. Finally the Duck [DUKW] was jockeyed into place.. . the sound camera mounted on the bow, “mike” lines buried in the coral, the [native] minister instructed to screen the one mike from the camera with his body, and the second mike suspended in a palm tree.^’ So perhaps the Bikinians are not being introduced to modernity, but rather postmodemity; the documentary film, a simulacrum of the Navy’s Active reality. Brian McHale argues that postmodernism in literature (and I would add television and film) is defined primarily by the “ontological dominant,” by “worlds.” McHale refers to “zones” or “the zone” (McHale, 10-11, 45; a good example being Pynchon’s “The Zone” in Gravity's Rainbow). This postmodern obsession with the ontological began, 1 believe, with the explosion of the first atomic bomb at New Mexico’s Trinity Site. Oppenheimer’s famous declaration, “I am become death, shatterer of worlds,” is perhaps more revealing than it seems on the surface. The otherworldly atomic bomb indeed shattered worlds. Although its effects would not immediately be felt in popular culture, the atomic bomb foregrounded ontological concerns: the splintering of worlds and a fascination with questions of what is real. According to Perry Anderson, “Modernisrh was powered by the excitement of the great cluster of new inventions that transfomied urban life in the early years of the century: the liner, the radio, the cinema, the skyscraper, the automobile, the aeroplane.” Postmodernism rises from the catastrophe of World