Rhetoric and history intersected dramatically during the Cold War, which was, above all else, a war of words. This volume, which combines the work of historians and communication scholars, examines the public discourse in Cold War America from a number of perspectives including how rhetoric shaped history and policies and how rhetorical images invited interpretations of history. The book opens with Norman Graebner's wideranging analysis of the rhetorical background of the Cold War. Frank Costigliola then parses Stalin's speech of February, 1946, an address that many in the West took as a declaration of war by the USSR. The development of NSC68 in 1950, often referred to as America's "blueprint" for fighting the Cold War, is the subject of Robert P. Newman's review. Shawn J. ParryGiles and J. Michael Hogan then focus on American propaganda responses to the perceived Soviet threat. H. W. Brands, Randall B. Woods, and Rachel L. Holloway examine the effects of liberal ideology and rhetoric on domestic and foreign policy decisions. Robert J. McMahon and Robert L. Ivie raise the issue of what it has meant to be the "leader of the Free World" and what the task of postCold War rhetoric will be in this regard. Scholars concerned with the role of words in public life and in the study of history will find challenging material in this interdisciplinary volume. Historians, speech communication scholars, and political scientists with an interest in the Cold War will similarly find grist for further milling.
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