by SallyMarks (Author)
In a space of little over 30 years, the world was transformed. The European great powers were no longer ascendant, even if that was not yet fully revealed to them, and the US, a regional power as of 1914, now belonged to the wholly new category of superpower. What happened in this short period to work such a dramatic change? The answer lies neither in Europe alone nor in the West more broadly, and one of the virtues of this bold new international history of the period that Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America are allowed to play their parts. It treats the Asian and European crises and wars of 1931-45, for example, as a single interlocking whole, as world leaders at the time were forced to do. It also acknowledges to an unusual degree the importance of imperial and economic circumstances in framing the policies of states towards one another.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 480
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Published: 01 Feb 2002
ISBN 10: 0340555661
ISBN 13: 9780340555668
Book Overview: Covers the transition from a 'European world' to one dominated by Super Power rivalry Broad in its approach, showing the interrelationships of diplomacy, domestic politics, technology, propaganda, economics The author's 'Illusion of Peace' is a standard treatment of Europe in the 1920s Stresses the role of empire and the non-western world, unlike rival texts