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His books are sometimes considered to represent the "orthodox" interpretation of history. [4] [5] His analysis of the origins of the Cold War was challenged from the left during the Vietnam era, with the allegation that the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings were designed primarily to stop Soviet expansionism and thus caused the Cold War. However ...
Historians of the Korean War (8 P) V. Historians of the Vietnam War (39 P) Pages in category "Cold War historians" The following 62 pages are in this category, out of ...
Soviet historiography on the Cold War era was overwhelmingly dictated by the Soviet state, and blamed the West for the Cold War. [5] In Britain, the historian E. H. Carr wrote a 14-volume history of the Soviet Union, which was focused on the 1920s and published 1950–1978.
A History of Historical Writing: Volume II: The Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries (2nd ed. 1967), 676 pp.; highly detailed coverage of European writers to 1900; Woolf, D. R. A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities) (2 vols. 1998), excerpt and text search; Woolf, Daniel, et al.
The Origins of the Cold War, London 1995, 2nd edition, xi+153pp; The Khrushchev Era: 1953-64. Longman, London, 1995. (Seminar Studies in History) The Origins of the Cold War 1941-49. Longman, London, 1995. (Seminar Studies in History) Investing in the Caspian Sea Region: Opportunity and Risk, London 1996, x+97pp Editor and Contributor; Russia ...
John Lewis Gaddis (born 1941) – historian of the Cold War; Ragnhild Hatton (1913–1995) – historian of 17th- and 18th-century international relations; Klaus Hildebrand (born 1941) Andreas Hillgruber (1925–1989) Paul Kennedy (born 1945) – British historian, author of influential The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers; William L. Langer ...
Robert Charles Tucker (May 29, 1918 – July 29, 2010) was an American political scientist and historian. Tucker is best remembered as a biographer of Joseph Stalin and as an analyst of the Soviet political system, which he saw as dynamic rather than unchanging.
Geoffrey Roberts (born 1952) is a British historian of World War II working at University College Cork. He specializes in Soviet diplomatic and military history of World War II. [1] He was professor of modern history at University College Cork (UCC) in Ireland and head of the School of History at UCC. [2]