PART I: CRYSTALLIZING THE COLD WAR
Chapter 1. George Kennan's Course, 1947-49: A
Gaullist before de Gaulle
John L. Harper
Chapter 2. The Bilderberg Group and the end of
the Cold War: The Disengagement Debates of the 1950s
Thomas W. Gijswijt
PART II: STALIN'S DEATH AND AFTER: A MISSED OPPORTUNITY?
Chapter 3. Moscow's Campaign Against the Cold
War, 1945-1955
Geoffrey Roberts
Chapter 4. Stalin's Death and Anglo-American
Visions of Ending the Cold War, 1953
Jaclyn Stanke
Chapter 5. Soviet Intellectuals after Stalin's
Death and Their Visions of the Cold War's End
Vladislav Zubok
PART III: ALTERNATIVE VISIONS OF THE 1960S
Chapter 6. Towards a New Concert of Europe: De
Gaulle's Vision of a Post-Cold War Europe
Garret Martin
Chapter 7. Franz Josef Stauß and the End of the
Cold War
Ronald J. Granieri
PART IV: A HELSINKI VISION?
Chapter 8. A Very British Vision of Détente:
The United Kingdom's Foreign Policy During the Helsinki Process,
1969-1975
Martin D. Brown
Chapter 9. The EC Nine's Vision and Attempts At
Ending the Cold War
Angela Romano
PART V: VISIONS AND DISSENT IN THE 1970S
Chapter 10. 'The Transformation of the Other
Side': Willy Brandt's Ostpolitik and the Liberal Peace Concept
Gottfried Niedhart
Chapter 11. Neither in One Bloc, Nor in the
Other: Berlinguer's Vision of the End of the Cold War
Laura Fasanaro
Chapter 12. Overcoming Bloc Division from
Below: Jiří Hájek and the CSCE Appeal of Charter 77
Christian Domnitz
PART VI: VISION OR STATUS QUO IN THE 1970S
Chapter 13. Henry Kissinger: Vision or Status
Quo?
Jussi Hanhimäki
Chapter 14. Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and his
Vision of the End of the Cold War
Georges-Henri Soutou
PART VII: EVOLUTIONARY VISIONS AND UNEXPECTED RESULTS IN THE 1980S
Chapter 15. Ending the Cold War,
Unintentionally
Gregory F. Domber
Chapter 16. Common Security as a Way to
Overcome the (Second) Cold War? Willy Brandt's Strategy for Peace
in the 1980s
Bernd Rother
Chapter 17. Which Socialism after the Cold War?
Gorbachev's Vision and its Impact on the French Left
Marie-Pierre Rey
Chapter 18. Thatcher's Double Track Road to the
End of the Cold War: The Irreconcilability of Liberalisation and
Preservation
Ilaria Poggiolini
Chapter 19. Mitterand's Vision and the End of
the Cold War
Fréderic Bozo
Chapter 20. Visions of Ending the Cold War:
Triumphalism and US Soviet Policy in the 1980s
Beth A. Fischer
Chapter 21. The Power of Imagination: How
Reagan's SDI Inadvertently Contributed to the End of the Cold
War
Marilena Gala
Bibliography
Frédéric Bozo is Professor of History and International Relations in the Department of European Studies at the Sorbonne (University of Paris III). His publications include Mitterrand, the End of the Cold War, and German Unification (2009) and Two Strategies for Europe: De Gaulle, the United States and the Atlantic Alliance (2001).
“[This] superb collection…[is] a unique and valuable contribution to the voluminous literature on the Cold War… Essential.” · Choice “This is an excellent collection of twenty-one essays divided into seven sections on perceptions of how the Cold War would end in Europe. Though the essays were presented at a conference previously held at the Sorbonne, the superb editing and organization make this compendium far more than a collection of proceedings… a welcome addition to the literature on the Cold War. Its content speaks for itself. Students and scholars alike should find it useful, and it should be mandatory reading in courses dealing with the Cold War.” · The European Legacy “ [This volume] is a fascinating book which crosses the boundaries of diplomatic and intellectual history in provocative and thoughtful ways...The individual chapters are all exemplary studies in the history of ideas and the book is a thoroughly enjoyable, eye-opening read..." · Contemporary European History “This edited collection does an excellent job of overcoming [an] historiographical lacuna. What is initially striking is just how comprehensive ...[and] just how pioneering and impressive a collection this is…[marked] by the masterly scholarship, outstanding multi-archival research and accessible chapters that serve to make up this edited book [that] deserves to sit on the bookshelves of academics and students alike” · European History Quarterly “These essays give some interesting insight into the minds of their subjects but more importantly achieve the book’s objective of understanding more of the essence of the Cold War and its driving forces… Unlike many such volumes, this book is not merely a collection of different ideas held together loosely by a theme, but a carefully selected group of arguments structured using a combined chronological and thematic approach.” · European Review of History—Revue européenne d’histoire “This collection succeeds in adding a new aspect to the numerous analyses of the end of the Cold War…This excellent volume brings together, for the first time, a rich and multi-layered panorama of ideas of an alternative world order.” · H-Net “The book’s value lies in its multinational and archive-based perspective on individuals and groups who offered ideas on how to end the Cold War. Readers thus receive a panoramic view of the conflict. The book also points the way for future research on the “visions” of other countries, individuals, and institutions not covered here.” · H-France “As this pioneering [volume] clearly and convincingly highlights, perceptions were important, as they influenced foreign policy objectives, international relations and personal chemistry between leaders, strategies for anti-Communist movements and civil society as well as the memory of the Cold War and historical assessments of its leading figures. That the work is able to achieve this through a daunting format that balances 21 separate entries by distinguished scholars in the fields of history, political science and international relations is itself remarkable. The editors must be applauded for organizing the contributions…into a cohesive, chronologically structured work that traces visions of the Cold War from “George Kennan’s Course” to President Ronald Reagan’s American exceptionalism in succinct chapters.” · Reviews & Critical Commentary (Council for European Studies) “This is an excellent collection of articles on an extremely interesting subject. The multinational and multi-archival nature of the selections is very impressive, and it attests to the health and vitality of international relations research in today’s academy. This is the type of book that should be examined by both policymakers and scholars, since it raises so many good and provocative questions about one of the most important events of our time, namely the end of the Cold War.” · Thomas A. Schwartz, Vanderbilt University “This is an outstanding, well integrated volume that is not only excellent as a history of the Cold War, but focuses on an issue hitherto unexplored in the discussions on the Cold War. [It] is a very good read by some outstanding scholars." · Michael Cox, London School of Economics "The editors have brought together an intriguing collection of essays. They explore visions of how the Cold War would end; the twist is that all of these visions were articulated before the actual end. The resulting essays shed light not only on the hopes and nightmares of participants, but also on the nature of the Cold War itself." · Mary Elise Sarotte, University of Southern California
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