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ID106348
Title ProperUses and abuses of history
Other Title Informationthe end of the cold war and Soviet collapse
LanguageENG
AuthorCox, Michael
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the by now extended debate about the end of the Cold War and its causes, very little attention has been paid to the role played by historical memory in helping shape the way policy-makers approached the collapse of the post-war order. As this article shows, many, if not most policy elites at the time, confronted the passing of the old world with a great degree of caution and trepidation; and one of the key reasons they did so, it is argued here, is because of their reading of the past. This reading, I go on to suggest, made many of them especially cautious and fearful when faced with great change. In the end of course these changes proved irresistible, and for liberals at least seemed to augur in more peaceful and prosperous times. However, as we shall see here, this unguarded optimism was not much in evidence as the old international system and the other superpower collapsed after 1989. Looking backwards rather than forwards, policy-makers approached the new dawn with much less enthusiasm and optimism than their public pronouncements seemed to indicate at the time or later.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Politics Vol. 48, No. 4-5; Jul-Sep 2011: p.627-646
Journal SourceInternational Politics Vol. 48, No. 4-5; Jul-Sep 2011: p.627-646
Key WordsEnd of Cold War ;  Memory ;  Lessons of History ;  Historical Analogy