This article examines the socio-cultural significance of cake during the postwar period. I argue that its commercial representation during the 1950s served as a vehicle for Americans to confront the unprecedented contradictions, anxieties, and chaos of the nuclear age. Although visual icons like the mushroom cloud provided a literal representation of nuclear force, cakes—and the private, feminine world they invoked—uniquely signaled the aggression, magnitude, and terror that nuclear power threatened to enact. Through close visual analysis, archival evidence, and historical accounts, I argue that cake imagery recuperates the site of bodies, violence, and loss that more direct references to the bomb obscured.
Rebecca Burditt (Thu,) studied this question.