Oral History, Analysis, Debates
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Köp båda 2 för 910 krThis is a first-rate book for anyone interested in the Cold War and international relations theory. William Wohlforth has done an excellent job of compiling and annotating transcripts from an oral history conference that brought together former Soviet and American officials, and he has carefully integrated the transcripts with substantive chapters by well-regarded authors, making a cohesive whole. The book sheds valuable light not only on the end of the Cold War, but on key theoretical issues in the field of international relations. Mark Kramer,Director, Cold War Studies Project, Harvard University The editor has done a superb job of assembling this collection of oral history transcripts and analytical articles. The result is an indispensable resource for the study of the last two years of the Cold War. David S. Painter,Georgetown University Cold War Endgame: Oral History, Analysis, Debates is a fine marriage of diplomatic recollection and theoretical analysis of a momentous three years. William Wohlforths book will be advantageous in seminars on Soviet-American relations, the end of the Cold War, and international relations theory. A terse summary cannot do justice to the richness of either diplomatic or scholarly argument. This good read will energize many a historical and theoretical discussion. Gordon L. Shull Perspectives on Political Science It is rare to have a volume that integrates pure primary sources along with scholarly analysis, and much of the pleasure in Cold War Endgame comes from jumping between the participants discussions and the analysis that follows. Much more will be written about this period of foreign policy history, but it is likely that Cold War Endgame will provide the foundation for these works. OJPCR: The Online Journal of Peace and Conflict Resolution This is a first-rate book for anyone interested in the Cold War and international relations theory. Giustificativo That said, the book has much to commend it, especially for courses focusing on US-Soviet interactions, or on the relevance of various approaches to international politics for an understanding of Cold War dynamics. William Zimmerman Russian Review
William C. Wohlforth is Associate Professor of Government at Dartmouth. He is the editor of Witnesses to the End of the Cold War (1996) and author of The Elusive Balance: Power and Perceptions During the Cold War (1993).
Contents Acknowledgments Introduction / William C. Wohlforth Part I: Oral History: The Princeton Conference 1. Forging a New Relationship 2. German Unification 3. The Persian Gulf War 4. The Collapse of the Soviet Union Part II: Analysis 5. Once Burned, Twice Shy? The Pause of 1989 Derek Chollet and James M. Goldgeier 6. Trust Busting Out all Over: The Soviet Side of German Unification Andrew O. Bennett Part III: Debates 7. Gorbachev and the End of the Cold War: Different Perspectives on the Historical Personality Vladislav Zubok 8. The Road(s) Not Taken: Causality and Contingency in Analysis of the Cold Wars End Robert D. English 9. Economic Constraints and the End of the Cold War Stephen G. Brooks and William C. Wohlforth Conclusion 10. Failure or Learning Opportunity? The End of the Cold War, International Relations Theory, and Lessons for Foreign Policy Joseph Lepgold List of Participants and Contributors Index