Fr. 75.00

Churchill and the Anglo-American Special Relationship

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

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Zusatztext '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 Informationen zum Autor 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). Zusammenfassung This book draws together some of the most established and best emergent scholars in a timely, critical celebration of Churchill’s contribution to establishing the Anglo-American special relationship. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction, Alan P. Dobson and Steve Marsh Prologue: The Ghost in the Attic: Churchill, the Soviet Union, and the Anglo-American Special Relationship, Warren F. Kimball 1. ‘Strategic Culture’ on the Road to (and from) Fulton: Institutionalism, Emotionalism, and the Anglo-American Special Relationship, David G. Haglund 2. Churchill’s Fulton Speech and the Context of Shared Values in a World of Dangers, Alan P. Dobson 3. Manipulating the Anglo-American Civilizational Identity in the Era of Churchill, Robert M. Hendershot 4. The Fulton Address as Racial Discourse, Srjdan Vucetic 5. Personal Diplomacy at the Summit, Steve Marsh 6. Churchill’s Ambassadors – from Fulton to Suez, Tony McCulloch 7. Churchill’s inter-subjective special relationship: a corpus-assisted discourse approach, Anna Marchi, Nuria Lorenzo- Dus and Steve Marsh 8. The Architecture of a Myth: Constructing and Commemorating Churchill’s Special Relationship, c. 1919-69, Sam Edwards 9. Curtains, Culture and ‘Collective’ Memory, David Ryan Conclusion, Alan P. Dobson and Steve Marsh ...

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