Volumi
Reinterpreting the End of the Cold War

a cura di Silvio Pons e Federico Romero
Frank Cass, Londra 2004
pp. 237, € 37,50 | 9780714684925

Atti del convegno internazionale di studi organizzato dalla Fondazione Istituto Gramsci, Roma 16-17 giugno 2002

The history of the Cold War is being re-written according to the newly available sources. But first and foremost, it needs to be re-conceptualized and framed within the broader historical context that transformed the Cold War from the 1960s onwards, altered the very dynamics of bipolarism, and eventually brought it to its end. The long duration and the unexpectedly peaceful ending of the Cold War call for new viewpoints that transcend the established paradigms about its inception. Historians ought to address all those transformations in the international economy, in the networks of interdependence linking together new areas – especially in Asia – and in the ensuing cultural images that gradually narrowed the relevance of bipolarism. Thus the habitual diplomatic and security themes must be enjoined with economic, ideological, technological and cultural ones.
Here a distinguished group of international history specialists discuss the complex relationship between Cold War dynamics, the globalizing of capitalism, and the demise of Soviet Communism. Their controversial and conflicting views, as well as their multidisciplinary approaches, highlight the various factors that constituted (and did not constitute) the Cold War. Thus they help to redefine the concept itself, to map its values and limitations, and to propel historical debate onto new grounds.

Indice

Notes on contributors VII

Introduction
SILVIO PONS AND FEDERICO ROMERO

PART I
Long duration, globalization and the changing frame of the Cold War
1 The Cold War as an era of imperial rivalry
CHARLES S. MAIER
2 Power, politics, and the long duration of the Cold War
MARK KRAMER
3 On recule pour mieux sauter, or ‘What needs to be done’ (to understand the 1970s)
LEOPOLDO NUTI
4 The Cold War considered as a US project
ANDERS STEPHANSON
5 Beginnings of the end: how the Cold War crumbled
ODD ARNE WESTAD
6 Karol Wojtyla and the end of the Cold War
AGOSTINO GIOVAGNOLI

PART II
The end of the Cold War and the downfall of Soviet communism
7 Economic information in the life and death of the Soviet command system
MARK HARRISON
8 Ideas and the end of the Cold War: rethinking intellectual and political change
ROBERT ENGLISH
9 Unwrapping an enigma: Soviet elites, Gorbachev and the end of the Cold War
VLADISLAV M. ZUBOK
10 1989: history is rewritten
JONATHAN HASLAM
11 Gorbachev and the demise of east European communism
MARK KRAMER
12 The end of Soviet communism: a review
FRANCESCO BENVENUTI AND SILVIO PONS

Index