Ideology and U.S Foreign Policy
✍ Scribed by Martha Banta
- Publisher
- Yale University Press
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 252
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
“Michael Hunt effectively analyzes the mental prisms through which perceptions of the American national interest are refracted. Policymakers will find his book provocative. All Americans who care about their country’s place in the world will find it worth reading.”—Rep. Stephen Solarz
“Three ‘core ideas’ of American political culture, according to Mr. Hunt, have powerfully molded American diplomacy, and they form the heart of his analysis. These ideas concern the questions of revolution, race and, most interestingly, liberty…. On the subject of liberty… Mr. Hunt is supple and suggestive. … Mr. Hunt’s examination of the conflation of liberty and greatness helps us understand the ideological genesis of the Reagan Doctrine, with is open-ended support for anti-Communist movements everywhere.”—David M. Kennedy, New York Times Book Review
“A lean, plain-spoken treatment of a grand subject…. A bold piece of criticism and advocacy…. The tight focus of the argument may insure its survival as one of the basic postwar critiques of U.S. policy.”—John W. Dower, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Michael H. Hunt is professor of history at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
✦ Table of Contents
Contents
Illustrations
Preface
1. Coming to Terms with Ideology
2. Visions of National Greatness
3. The Hierarchy of Race
4. The Perils of Revolution
5. Ideology in Twentieth-Century Foreign Policy
6. The Contemporary Dilemma
Essay on the Historical Literature
Notes
Index
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