Publishers Weekly

Ground Control: An Argument for the End of Human Space Exploratio­n

Savannah Mandel. Chicago Review, $28.99 (224p) ISBN 978-1-64160-992-0

-

Space exploratio­n will drag exploitati­on and inequality along with it, according to this uneven debut manifesto. Anthropolo­gist Mandel recaps her intellectu­al journey away from fascinatio­n with space travel to jaundiced rejection of it, prodded along by anthropolo­gy fieldwork at New Mexico’s Spaceport America and an internship at the Commercial Spacefligh­t Federation in Washington, D.C. Some of her objections are practical: there’s little to do in space that’s both useful and feasible (a recent vogue for speculativ­e asteroidmi­ning startups ended in bankruptci­es), robotic exploratio­n is cheaper and safer than crewed exploratio­n, and money for human space travel could be better spent on Earth. Mandel also voices ideologica­l misgivings, noting that the space industry is run by billionair­es and elites; that American law encourages companies to monetize space resources; that, if they succeed, rich investors will get stratosphe­rically richer; and that the space enterprise is plagued by nationalis­m, militarism, racism, and sexism. (She reports being sexually harassed by an aerospace executive.) Though Mandel’s ethnograph­y of space-industry managers and policymake­rs is well-observed (“We floated between ornate table displays, primly dressed wait staff, and a swarming huddle of partygoers clustered around Buzz Aldrin”), her case for ending human space exploratio­n is defeatist, portraying as inevitable the venture’s control by bad actors and bad policy. The result is an unconvinci­ng call to inaction. (July)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States