1st Edition

Deconstructing and Reconstructing the Cold War

By Shahin P. Malik, Alan P. Dobson Copyright 1999
    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    Published in 1999. These essays are not deconstructive in the postmodern sense. None of the authors have that depth of scepticism about knowledge claims, but they are all concerned that the terms of reference of Cold War enquiry have been inappropriately bounded. The chapters by Murray and Reynolds specifically address the broad theoretical issues involved with paradigms and explanation. The chapters by Dobson, Marsh, Malik, Evans and Dix stretch out Cold War paradigms with successive case studies of Anglo-American relations; the USA, Britain, Iran and the oil majors; the Gulf States and the Cold War; South Africa and the Cold War; and Indian neutralism. All five authors challenge the efficacy of neo-realist analysis and explanation and critique the way that assumptions derived from that position have been used in historical explanation. The chapters by Ryall, Rogers and Bideleux deal with Roman Catholicism in East Central Europe, with nuclear matters and with the Soviet perspective. Each work goes beyond the limits of Cold War paradigms. Finally, Ponting places the Cold War in the broad context of world history. These essays provide thought-provoking scholarship which helps us both to nuance our understanding of the Cold War and to realise that it should not be taken as an all-embracing paradigm for the explanation of postwar international relations.

    Part 1: Theory  1. Reconstructing the Cold War: The Evolution of a Consuming Paradigm Alastair Murray  2. Explaining the Cold War Charles Reynolds  Part 2: Stretching out the Paradigms  3. Anglo-American Relations and the Cold War Alan P. Dobson  4. The Limits of US Cold War Hegemony: Lessons from the Anglo-Iranian Oil Crisis Steve Marsh  5. Explaining Outside Interests in the Persian Gulf Shahin P. Malik   6. The Great Simplifier: The Cold War and South Africa 1948-1994 Graham Evans  7. The United States and India: The Challenge of Neutralism to Bipolarity Jacqueline Dix  Part 3: Beyond the Paradigms  8. The Cross and the Bear: The Vatican’s Cold War Diplomacy in East Central Europe David Ryall  9. Learning from the Cold War Nuclear Confrontation Paul Rogers  10. Soviet and Russian Perspectives on the Cold War Robert Bideleux  11. The Cold War in the Context of World History Clive Ponting.

    Biography

    Shahin P. Malik, Alan P. Dobson