"This volume investigates the cultural sites where the global Cold War played out. It brings to view unpredictable encounters that arose as writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals from or aligned with the Third World navigated the ideological and material constraints set by superpowers and emerging regional powers. Often these encounters generated communitas and solidarity, while at times they fed old and new conflicts. Pushing forward recent scholarship that tracks the Cold War in the Global South and draws on postcolonial approaches, our contributors use archival, secondary, and ethnographic sources to trace the afterlives and memories of key figures and to explore meetings that performed cultural diplomacy. Our focus on sites of encounter or exchange underscores the situated, interpersonal, and embodied dimensions through which much of the cultural Cold War was experienced. While the global conflict divided citizens along ideological fault lines, it also linked people through circulating media-novels, film, posters, journals, and theatre-and multinational conferences that brought artists, intellectuals, and political activists together. Such contacts introduced new axes of solidarity and hierarchies of exclusion. Examining these connections and disjunctures, this new and necessary mapping of the cultural Cold War highlights under-addressed locations in Asia, Africa, and Latin America"--
Indeed , popular opinion was generally supportive of President George W. Bush's decision to vilify an " axis of evil ... Americans continued to regard the nations it comprised as threatening to U.S. interests long after Bush first used ...
The Cold War
... 34,42 ' Atoms for Peace ' 132–3 Cannon , Mary 63 , 79 , 135 Canterbury , Dean of 136 Carrie Chapman Catt Memorial Fund see League of Women Voters Carroll , Berenice A. 125 Catt , Carrie Chapman 8 , 32–3 , 199 Central Intelligence ...
Moore 2001: 120; Pearson 2002: 48; Lieven 2000. 9. E.g. Slezkine 1994, 2000; Baberowski 2003; Moore 2001; Northrop 2004; Hirsch 2000, 2005; Lapidus, Zaslavsky, and Goldman 1992. 10. E.g. Slezkine 1994. 11. Seton-Watson 1962: 87. 12.
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Like many world events that hinge on a few actions, City of Spies shows the peaceful revolution in Eastern Europe was anything but inevitable. Twenty-five years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, City of Spies finds startling relevance.
Soviet-American Confrontation; Postwar Reconstruction and the Origins of the Cold War
On Every Front: The Making of the Cold War