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El. knyga: Churchill and the Anglo-American Special Relationship

Edited by (Swansea University, UK), Edited by (Cardiff University, UK)
  • Formatas: 286 pages
  • Serija: Cold War History
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Feb-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317283713
  • Formatas: 286 pages
  • Serija: Cold War History
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Feb-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317283713

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This book examines Winston Churchill’s role in the creation and development of the Anglo–American special relationship.

Drawing together world leading and emergent scholars, this volume offers a critical celebration of Churchill’s contribution to establishing the Anglo–American special relationship. Marking the seventieth anniversary of Churchill’s pronouncement in 1946 of that special relationship in his famous Iron Curtain speech, the book provides new insights into old debates by drawing upon approaches and disciplines that have hitherto been marginalised or neglected. The book foregrounds agency, culture, values, ideas and the construction and representation of special Anglo–American relations, past and present. The volume covers two main themes. Firstly, it identifies key influences upon Churchill as he developed his political career, especially processes and patterns of Anglo–American convergence prior to and during World War Two. Second, it provides insights into how Churchill sought to promote a post-war Anglo–American special relationship, how he discursively constructed it and how he has remained central to that narrative to the present day. From this analysis emerges new understanding of the raw material from which Churchill conjured special UK–US relations and of how his conceptualisation of that special relationship has been shaped and re-shaped in the decades after 1946.

This book will be of much interest to students of Anglo–American relations, Cold War Studies, foreign policy, international history and IR in general.

Recenzijos

'The scholarly essays provide interesting and detailed observations into the post-war special relationship from various viewpoints. ...an insightful and original addition to the study of Winston Churchill.'--Brad Tolppanen, A Blog on Winston Churchill

'The purpose of the volume is to move beyond the more traditional focus on the political, diplomatic and security foundations of the relationship and to explore other avenues of approach. So, the exploration of the role played by factors such as common Anglo-American values, traditions, memorialisation and commemoration loom large in this volume. Interdisciplinary perspectives are provided from the disciplines of political science by Haglund and Vucetic, and linguistics by Marchi and Lorenzo-Dus. Historians can certainly learn from these approaches which alert us both to the importance of the pursuit of abstract concepts over time, and to a more methodical analysis of the use of language in the construction of the past (and present.' -- Nigel Ashton, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK

Notes on contributors vii
Introduction 1(9)
Alan P. Dobson
Steve Marsh
Prologue -- the ghost in the attic: Churchill, the Soviet Union, and the Anglo-American Special Relationship 10(9)
Warren F. Kimball
1 `Strategic culture' on the road to (and from) Fulton: institutionalism, emotionalism, and the Anglo-American special relationship
19(24)
David G. Haglund
2 Churchill's Fulton speech and the context of shared values in a world of dangers
43(21)
Alan P. Dobson
3 Manipulating the Anglo-American civilizational identity in the era of Churchill
64(32)
Robert M. Hendershot
4 The Fulton address as racial discourse
96(20)
Srdjan Vucetic
5 Personal diplomacy at the summit
116(26)
Steve Marsh
6 Churchill's ambassadors - from Fulton to Suez
142(29)
Tony McCulloch
7 Churchill's inter-subjective special relationship: a corpus-assisted discourse approach
171(31)
Anna Marchi
Nuria Lorenzo-Dus
Steve Marsh
8 The architecture of a myth: constructing and commemorating Churchill's special relationship, c. 1919-69
202(21)
Sam Edwards
9 Curtains, culture and `collective' memory
223(24)
David Ryan
Conclusion 247(6)
Alan P. Dobson
Steve Marsh
Primary sources 253(22)
Index 275
Alan P. Dobson is an Honorary Professor at Swansea University, UK, and author of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Civil Aviation 1933-1945 (2011).

Steve Marsh is Reader in International Relations at Cardiff University, UK and editor of Anglo-American Relations: Contemporary Perspectives (2013, with Alan P. Dobson).