Hogan is Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Illinois, Springfield. He has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Professor Costigliola is a former president of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. He is the editor of The Kennan Diaries (2014) and the author of Roosevelt’s Lost Alliances: How Personal Politics Helped Start the Cold War (2012) France and the United States: The Cold War Alliance since World War II (1992) and Awkward Dominion: American Political, Economic, and Cultural Relations with Europe, 1919–1933 (1984). Frank Costigliola is Professor of History at the University of Connecticut. foreign policy that highlights recent developments in the field. The result is a comprehensive assessment of the historical literature on U.S. relations with particular regions of the world or on the foreign policies of presidential administrations.
Several of the essays offer sweeping overviews of the major trends in the field of foreign/international relations history while others survey the literature on U.S. Mass Consumerism and Debates over “Americanization” in the Early Twentieth CenturyĪmerica in the World, Second Edition This volume includes historiographical surveys of American foreign relations since 1941 by some of the country’s leading historians. Mass Consumerism in Transnational Perspective The United States and Asia in the Early Cold Warġ3 Technology and the Environment in the Global Economyġ4 U.S. NixonĨ The War that Never Ends: Historians and the Vietnam Warĩ Culture and the Cold War: U.S.–Latin American Historiography since 1995ġ0 Impatient Crusaders: The Making of America’s Informal Empire in the Middle East Kennedy, Lyndon Baines Johnson, and Richard M. The End of the Cold War: Early 1980s–1991ħ Cold War Presidents: Dwight D. Foreign Relations during World War IIĥ Recent Literature on Truman’s Atomic Bomb Decision Foreign Relations, 1980–1995Ĥ Still Contested and Colonized Ground: Post–Cold War Interpretations of U.S. 2 The Charlie Maier Scare and the Historiography of American Foreign Relations, 1959–1980ģ Chaps Having Flaps: The Historiography of U.S.