74,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 6-10 Tagen
payback
37 °P sammeln
  • Gebundenes Buch

Making use of newly-researched archival material, this collection of original essays on wartime and postwar US foreign policy re-evaluates well-known crises and documents many less familiar aspects of the nation's mid-twentieth century conflicts. Leading diplomatic historians address familiar subjects from new angles. They offer new evidence about the risks run and the costs incurred in the prosecution of the Cold War, from Korea to the Caribbean. And they provide up-to-date accounting of mid-twentieth century American diplomacy's global purposes and consequences.

Produktbeschreibung
Making use of newly-researched archival material, this collection of original essays on wartime and postwar US foreign policy re-evaluates well-known crises and documents many less familiar aspects of the nation's mid-twentieth century conflicts. Leading diplomatic historians address familiar subjects from new angles. They offer new evidence about the risks run and the costs incurred in the prosecution of the Cold War, from Korea to the Caribbean. And they provide up-to-date accounting of mid-twentieth century American diplomacy's global purposes and consequences.
Autorenporträt
RICHARD CROCKATT Reader in American History, University of East Anglia BRUCE CUMINGS Norman and Edna Freehling Professor of History, University of Chicago LLOYD C. GARDNER Charles and Mary Beard Professor of History, New Brunswick Campus, Rutgers University, New Jersey WARREN F. KIMBALL Robert Treat Professor of History, Newark College, Rutgers University PETER LOWE Reader in History, Manchester University SCOTT LUCAS Chair, Department of American and Canadian Studies, University of Birmingham NICOLA MILLER Reader in Latin American History, University College, London MARIO RAPOPORT Professor of Economic History and History of International Relations, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina CLAUDIO SPIGUEL Associate Professor of History, University of Buenos Aires