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Origins of Containment
A Psychological Explanation
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and
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2020
About this book
The description for this book, Origins of Containment: A Psychological Explanation, will be forthcoming.
Reviews
"Deborah W. Larson's cogent and lucid analysis of the historical origins of containment is presented three-dimensionally. Larson invokes the theoretical tools of the political scientist, historian, and psychologist to demonstrate that no single disciplinary model has sufficient explanatory value. Instead, she offers us a 'composite multidimensional strategy' to explain why the United States embraced Cold War policies in the period following World War II."---Lauren H. Holland, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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"The bulk of the book consists of an intelligent and balanced account of the evolutions of United States policy toward the Soviet Union in the early Truman years. Larson's focus is on the four men--Harry S. Truman, James F. Byrnes, W. Averell Harriman, Dean Acheson--whom she considers the key figures in this evolution. . . . Larson portrays an uncertain, vacillating President who was inarticulate on strategic issues, lacked a coherent philosophy of foreign policy, was unduly impressed by the last person who talked to him, and spent these years in a 'genuine torment of indecision.' . . . In general, Larson sees the Cold War belief system as the consequence, not the cause of, the adoption of the containment policy."---Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Political Science Quarterly
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"A refutation of the idea that nothing remains to be said about the origins of the Cold War. The author offers cogent criticisms of the limitations of revisionist and 'confirmationist' interpretations and then subtly applies a range of theories about the way people think to the behavior of American leaders in the years 1945-1947."
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"One of the more encouraging historiographical developments of recent years has been the dialogue that is beginning to take place between American diplomatic historians and their colleagues in the fields of political science, international relations, and social pathology. . . . Larson's book provides impressive evidence that these interdisciplinary contacts are at last bearing fruit."---John Lewis Gaddis, American Historical Review
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
vii -
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PREFACE
ix -
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
xiii -
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ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE FOOTNOTES
xv -
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INTRODUCTION
1 -
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ONE. Social Psychological Theories of Attitude Change
24 -
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TWO. Taming the Bear
66 -
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THREE. Truman as World Leader
126 -
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FOUR. Keeping Agreements
150 -
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FIVE. Power Politics
213 -
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Six. Drift and Indecision
250 -
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SEVEN. "This Terrible Decision"
302 -
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CONCLUSIONS
324 -
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SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
357 -
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INDEX
375
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
February 8, 2021
eBook ISBN:
9780691214689
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook ISBN:
9780691214689
Keywords for this book
Soviet Union; Harry S. Truman; Foreign policy; Containment; Foreign policy of the United States; Ideology; Totalitarianism; United States Department of State; Great power; Self-perception theory; Dean Acheson; Adviser; Eastern Europe; Russians; Social psychology; World War II; Appeasement; Soviet Empire; Yalta Conference; Sphere of influence; Origins of the Cold War; Allied-occupied Germany; Potsdam Conference; George Kennan (explorer); Isolationism; W. Averell Harriman; Power politics; International relations; Armistice; Walter Lippmann; James F. Byrnes; Demobilization; Refusal; Politician; Franklin D. Roosevelt; Rhetoric; Stalinism; The New York Times; Dictatorship; Self-determination; Turkish Straits crisis; Power vacuum; Psychology; Satellite state; Peace treaty; Attitude change; Historian; Requirement; John Lewis Gaddis; Lend-Lease; Atlantic Charter; Domino theory; Politics; League of Nations; Soviet Union–United States relations; World peace; Near East; Western Europe; Disarmament; Tom Pendergast; Journal of Personality and Social Psychology; Turkish Straits; Coalition government; Puppet state; Czechoslovakia; Marshall Plan; Interwar period; Moscow Conference (1944); Archival research; Realpolitik
Audience(s) for this book
For an expert adult audience, including professional development and academic research