The Cold War is often presented as an international power struggle between the Soviet Union and the US. Richard Saull challenges this assumption. He broadens our understanding of the defining political conflict of the twentieth-century by stressing the social and ideological differences of the superpowers and how these differences conditioned their international behaviour.
Saull argues that US-Soviet antagonism was part of a wider conflict between capitalism and communism involving states and social forces other than the superpowers. The US was committed to containing revolutionary and communist movements that emerged out of uneven capitalist development.
In highlighting the socio-economic and ideological dimensions of the Cold War, Saull not only provides a richer history of the Cold War than mainstream approaches, but is also able to explain why revolutionary domestic transformations caused international crises. Tracing the origins of new resistance to American global power, Saull’s book provides an ideal alternative perspective on the Cold War and its end.
Tabla de materias
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: History and Theory in the Cold War
2. The International Impact of the Bolshevik Revolution and the
Early Cold War, 1917-1945
3. The Cold War Transformed: Geopolitical Restructuring
and a New Wave of Social Revolution, 1945-49
4. The Militarization of Cold War: The Containment of the USSR 4
and the Emergence of New Revolutionary Fronts, 1950-62
5. The Final Gasp of Cold War: The Decline of US Military Superiority and the Expansion of International Communist Power, 1962-80
6. Ending the Cold War: From Militarized Counter-Revolution to the Collapse of Soviet Communism, 1980-91
7. Conclusions: Tracing the Paradoxical Ends of the Cold War and the Origins of Contemporary Conflict in World Politics
Select Bibliography
Index
Sobre el autor
Richard Saull is Lecturer in International Politics in the Department of Politics, Queen Mary, University of London, and is the author of Rethinking Theory and History in the Cold War (Routledge, 2001) and The Cold War and After (Pluto, 2007).