The Oxford Handbook of the Cold War
Herausgeber: Goedde, Petra; Immerman, Richard H.
The Oxford Handbook of the Cold War
Herausgeber: Goedde, Petra; Immerman, Richard H.
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Thirty four essays by a team of leading scholars offering a broad reassessment of the cold war, calling into question orthodox ways of ordering the chronology of the period and presenting new insights into the global dimension of the conflict.
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Thirty four essays by a team of leading scholars offering a broad reassessment of the cold war, calling into question orthodox ways of ordering the chronology of the period and presenting new insights into the global dimension of the conflict.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 682
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Mai 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 1157g
- ISBN-13: 9780198779391
- ISBN-10: 0198779399
- Artikelnr.: 44492926
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 682
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Mai 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 1157g
- ISBN-13: 9780198779391
- ISBN-10: 0198779399
- Artikelnr.: 44492926
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Richard H. Immerman is Professor and Edward J. Buthusiem Family Distinguished Faculty Fellow in History at Temple University and the Marvin Wachman Director of its Center for the Study of Force and Diplomacy. He currently chairs the Historical Advisory Committee to the United States' Department of State. Petra Goedde is Associate Professor of History at Temple University and Associate Director of Temple University's Center for the Humanities (CHAT).
* 1: Richard H. Immerman and Petra Goedde: Introduction
* Part I: Conceptual Frameworks
* 2: Akira Iriye: Historicizing the Cold War
* 3: Naoko Shibusawa: Ideology, Culture, and the Cold War
* 4: Ian Jackson: Economics and the Cold War
* 5: Geoffrey Warner: Geopolitics and the Cold War
* 6: Prasenjit Duara: The Cold War and the Imperialism of Nation-States
* Part II: Regional Cold Wars/Cold War Crises
* 7: Vladimir O. Pechatnov: Soviet-American Relations through the Cold
War
* 8: Rana Mitter: China and the Cold War
* 9: Klaus Larres: Great Britain and the Cold War, 1945-1990
* 10: Andreas Etges: Western Europe
* 11: Bernd Stoever: Eastern Europe
* 12: Lars Schoultz: Latin America
* 13: Andrew J. Rotter: South Asia
* 14: Ang Chen Guan: The Cold War in Southeast Asia
* 15: Salim Yaqub: The Cold War and the Middle East
* 16: Elizabeth Schmidt: Africa
* 17: Antony Best: Japan and the Cold War: An Overview
* Part III: Waging the Cold War
* 18: Vladislav Zubok: Cold War Strategies/Power and Culture - East:
Sources of Soviet Conduct Reconsidered
* 19: Christopher Endy: Power and Culture in the West
* 20: David R. Stone: The Military
* 21: Campbell Craig: The Nuclear Revolution: A Product of the Cold
War, or Something More?
* 22: Amy L. Sayward: International Institutions
* 23: Robert Mark Spaulding: Trade, Aid, and Economic Warfare
* 24: John Prados: Cold War Intelligence History
* Part IV: Challenging the Cold War Paradigm
* 25: Philipp Gassert: Internal Challenges to the Cold War:
Oppositional Movements East and West
* 26: Penny Von Eschen: Locating the Transnational in the Cold War
* 27: Cary Fraser: Decolonization and the Cold War
* 28: Barbara Keys and Roland Burke: Human Rights
* 29: Brenda Gayle Plummer: Race and the Cold War
* 30: Helen Laville: Gender and Women's Rights in the Cold War
* 31: Dianne Kirby: The Religious Cold War
* 32: Richard P. Tucker: The International Environmental Movement and
the Cold War
* 33: Hyung-Gu Lynn: Globalization and the Cold War
* Part V: The End of the Cold War
* 34: Nicholas Guyatt: The End of the Cold War
* Part I: Conceptual Frameworks
* 2: Akira Iriye: Historicizing the Cold War
* 3: Naoko Shibusawa: Ideology, Culture, and the Cold War
* 4: Ian Jackson: Economics and the Cold War
* 5: Geoffrey Warner: Geopolitics and the Cold War
* 6: Prasenjit Duara: The Cold War and the Imperialism of Nation-States
* Part II: Regional Cold Wars/Cold War Crises
* 7: Vladimir O. Pechatnov: Soviet-American Relations through the Cold
War
* 8: Rana Mitter: China and the Cold War
* 9: Klaus Larres: Great Britain and the Cold War, 1945-1990
* 10: Andreas Etges: Western Europe
* 11: Bernd Stoever: Eastern Europe
* 12: Lars Schoultz: Latin America
* 13: Andrew J. Rotter: South Asia
* 14: Ang Chen Guan: The Cold War in Southeast Asia
* 15: Salim Yaqub: The Cold War and the Middle East
* 16: Elizabeth Schmidt: Africa
* 17: Antony Best: Japan and the Cold War: An Overview
* Part III: Waging the Cold War
* 18: Vladislav Zubok: Cold War Strategies/Power and Culture - East:
Sources of Soviet Conduct Reconsidered
* 19: Christopher Endy: Power and Culture in the West
* 20: David R. Stone: The Military
* 21: Campbell Craig: The Nuclear Revolution: A Product of the Cold
War, or Something More?
* 22: Amy L. Sayward: International Institutions
* 23: Robert Mark Spaulding: Trade, Aid, and Economic Warfare
* 24: John Prados: Cold War Intelligence History
* Part IV: Challenging the Cold War Paradigm
* 25: Philipp Gassert: Internal Challenges to the Cold War:
Oppositional Movements East and West
* 26: Penny Von Eschen: Locating the Transnational in the Cold War
* 27: Cary Fraser: Decolonization and the Cold War
* 28: Barbara Keys and Roland Burke: Human Rights
* 29: Brenda Gayle Plummer: Race and the Cold War
* 30: Helen Laville: Gender and Women's Rights in the Cold War
* 31: Dianne Kirby: The Religious Cold War
* 32: Richard P. Tucker: The International Environmental Movement and
the Cold War
* 33: Hyung-Gu Lynn: Globalization and the Cold War
* Part V: The End of the Cold War
* 34: Nicholas Guyatt: The End of the Cold War
* 1: Richard H. Immerman and Petra Goedde: Introduction
* Part I: Conceptual Frameworks
* 2: Akira Iriye: Historicizing the Cold War
* 3: Naoko Shibusawa: Ideology, Culture, and the Cold War
* 4: Ian Jackson: Economics and the Cold War
* 5: Geoffrey Warner: Geopolitics and the Cold War
* 6: Prasenjit Duara: The Cold War and the Imperialism of Nation-States
* Part II: Regional Cold Wars/Cold War Crises
* 7: Vladimir O. Pechatnov: Soviet-American Relations through the Cold
War
* 8: Rana Mitter: China and the Cold War
* 9: Klaus Larres: Great Britain and the Cold War, 1945-1990
* 10: Andreas Etges: Western Europe
* 11: Bernd Stoever: Eastern Europe
* 12: Lars Schoultz: Latin America
* 13: Andrew J. Rotter: South Asia
* 14: Ang Chen Guan: The Cold War in Southeast Asia
* 15: Salim Yaqub: The Cold War and the Middle East
* 16: Elizabeth Schmidt: Africa
* 17: Antony Best: Japan and the Cold War: An Overview
* Part III: Waging the Cold War
* 18: Vladislav Zubok: Cold War Strategies/Power and Culture - East:
Sources of Soviet Conduct Reconsidered
* 19: Christopher Endy: Power and Culture in the West
* 20: David R. Stone: The Military
* 21: Campbell Craig: The Nuclear Revolution: A Product of the Cold
War, or Something More?
* 22: Amy L. Sayward: International Institutions
* 23: Robert Mark Spaulding: Trade, Aid, and Economic Warfare
* 24: John Prados: Cold War Intelligence History
* Part IV: Challenging the Cold War Paradigm
* 25: Philipp Gassert: Internal Challenges to the Cold War:
Oppositional Movements East and West
* 26: Penny Von Eschen: Locating the Transnational in the Cold War
* 27: Cary Fraser: Decolonization and the Cold War
* 28: Barbara Keys and Roland Burke: Human Rights
* 29: Brenda Gayle Plummer: Race and the Cold War
* 30: Helen Laville: Gender and Women's Rights in the Cold War
* 31: Dianne Kirby: The Religious Cold War
* 32: Richard P. Tucker: The International Environmental Movement and
the Cold War
* 33: Hyung-Gu Lynn: Globalization and the Cold War
* Part V: The End of the Cold War
* 34: Nicholas Guyatt: The End of the Cold War
* Part I: Conceptual Frameworks
* 2: Akira Iriye: Historicizing the Cold War
* 3: Naoko Shibusawa: Ideology, Culture, and the Cold War
* 4: Ian Jackson: Economics and the Cold War
* 5: Geoffrey Warner: Geopolitics and the Cold War
* 6: Prasenjit Duara: The Cold War and the Imperialism of Nation-States
* Part II: Regional Cold Wars/Cold War Crises
* 7: Vladimir O. Pechatnov: Soviet-American Relations through the Cold
War
* 8: Rana Mitter: China and the Cold War
* 9: Klaus Larres: Great Britain and the Cold War, 1945-1990
* 10: Andreas Etges: Western Europe
* 11: Bernd Stoever: Eastern Europe
* 12: Lars Schoultz: Latin America
* 13: Andrew J. Rotter: South Asia
* 14: Ang Chen Guan: The Cold War in Southeast Asia
* 15: Salim Yaqub: The Cold War and the Middle East
* 16: Elizabeth Schmidt: Africa
* 17: Antony Best: Japan and the Cold War: An Overview
* Part III: Waging the Cold War
* 18: Vladislav Zubok: Cold War Strategies/Power and Culture - East:
Sources of Soviet Conduct Reconsidered
* 19: Christopher Endy: Power and Culture in the West
* 20: David R. Stone: The Military
* 21: Campbell Craig: The Nuclear Revolution: A Product of the Cold
War, or Something More?
* 22: Amy L. Sayward: International Institutions
* 23: Robert Mark Spaulding: Trade, Aid, and Economic Warfare
* 24: John Prados: Cold War Intelligence History
* Part IV: Challenging the Cold War Paradigm
* 25: Philipp Gassert: Internal Challenges to the Cold War:
Oppositional Movements East and West
* 26: Penny Von Eschen: Locating the Transnational in the Cold War
* 27: Cary Fraser: Decolonization and the Cold War
* 28: Barbara Keys and Roland Burke: Human Rights
* 29: Brenda Gayle Plummer: Race and the Cold War
* 30: Helen Laville: Gender and Women's Rights in the Cold War
* 31: Dianne Kirby: The Religious Cold War
* 32: Richard P. Tucker: The International Environmental Movement and
the Cold War
* 33: Hyung-Gu Lynn: Globalization and the Cold War
* Part V: The End of the Cold War
* 34: Nicholas Guyatt: The End of the Cold War