Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Ch 1: Truman
Ch 2: Transition
Ch 3: Eisenhower
Ch 4: Execution
Ch 5: Reverberations
Conclusion
Notes
Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index
Lori Clune is Associate Professor of History at California State University, Fresno.
"Executing the Rosenbergs is a highly readable, meticulously
researched, and fascinating account of the case and execution of
husband and wife Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were tried for
espionage. Historian Lori Clune seeks particularly to highlight
international reaction to the case and how the US government
responded. Uncovering State Department documents from the National
Archives, Clune is able to weave a fascinating story about global
reaction
to the case. For general readers not familiar with the case beyond
the names and the accusations of atomic espionage, the book serves
as a wonderful introduction not only to the Rosenbergs but also to
the Cold
War anti-communist hysteria during the Truman and Eisenhower
administrations....The overall strength of this excellent book is
the rich detail it provides on individuals and the episode in
general. Highly recommended."--CHOICE
"Lori Clune has produced a massively-documented book...Clune's
approach, in terms of showing how American diplomats and people in
foreign countries responded to events, adds a new dimension to the
story."--Jim Burns, Northern Review of Books
"Clune details the facts comprehensively with great care and
sensitivity...[A] measured and engaged history of the case and its
immediate context, correcting many of the errors of previous
histories."--Anders Stephanson, Diplomatic History
"Executing the Rosenbergs is a highly readable, meticulously
researched, and fascinating account of the case and execution of
husband and wife Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were tried for
espionage...Clune is able to weave a fascinating story about global
reaction to the case...This book will fascinate those interested in
the specifics of the case...[T]he overall strength of this
excellent book is the rich detail it provides on individuals and
the
episode in general...Highly recommended."--CHOICE
"Lori Clune...has pulled off the remarkable feat of shining
important new light on an old story. Clune's views are deeply held,
yet her treatment is never polemical or shrill."--Andrew Preston,
Times Literary Supplement
"Although the Rosenberg library is voluminous, the latest addition,
Executing the Rosenbergs , has an original perspective Itt focuses
not on guilt or innocence but on the response of two American
administrations to the worldwide outcry the case inspired."--Miriam
Schneir, The Nation
"Lori Clune's gripping monograph shows how the United States
attempted to 'spin' the Rosenberg case and the couples' executions
in the Cold War propaganda campaign of the early 1950s, and failed.
Clune's impeccable research not only exposes Washington's efforts
at shaping overseas reactions and coverage of the Rosenbergs' fate;
it also points to the contradictory response the case engendered
within the government itself as officials struggled to downplay
critical coverage abroad and defuse an international movement that
grew to include nearly 50 countries whose citizens were
passionately concerned about their draconian
sentencing."--Katherine Sibley, author
of Red Spies in America: Stolen Secrets and the Dawn of the Cold
War
"Do we need another book on the Rosenbergs? We need this one--Lori
Clune's remarkable account of how the United States lost the moral
upper ground during one of the Cold War's most important crusades
is a must read for anyone interested in the Eisenhower presidency,
global activism, Cold War politics, and espionage."--Kathryn
Statler, University of San Diego
"Making thorough use of previously undiscovered State Department
files, Lori Clune provides us with a long-overdue first study of
the global reactions to the execution of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg, one of the most notorious events of the Cold War era. In
so doing, she makes a significant contribution not only to our
understanding of the Rosenberg case but the Cold War more
generally. And by showing the range and scope of responses over
space and time, she
convincingly demonstrates that the execution had far-reaching
consequences."--Moshik Temkin, Harvard University
"Balanced, yet provocative, Executing the Rosenbergs tells a
compelling story about the global ramifications of one of the Cold
War's most enduring controversies. Readers familiar with the tale
of the Cold War's most famous atomic spies will learn much from the
wealth of new insights and information Lori Clune brings to the
table. Newcomers to the Rosenberg case will find in these pages a
gripping, compelling, and accessible narrative--one free of
the polarizing tint that has colored other historical writings on
the case."--Kenneth Osgood, author of Total Cold War: Eisenhower's
Secret Propaganda Battle at Home and Abroad
"It is not often that an academic book reads like a novel, yet that
is precisely the case for Executing the Rosenbergs....Clune has
especially succeeded at embedding the Rosenberg trial within the
larger, worldwide drama of the Cold War."-Harold Ticktin, Jewish
Currents
"Executing the Rosenbergs opens new lines of inquiry about the red
scare and its transnational implications."-Robbie Lieberman,
Journal of American History
"An excellent addition to the historiography of the early Cold War,
and a fine teaching resource for college classrooms...[that] can be
applied in many contexts. The book is fertile ground for students
to learn how propaganda influences our assumptions about the nature
of guilt and innocence. It is also a good tool for debate....All
readers will like that Clune's narrative takes just 167 pages
before endnotes, a brevity which is admirable in a discipline
where
historians...tend to overwhelm the reader with information. Yet
Clune still manages the difficult task of writing a thrilling, yet
substantive history, interweaving multiple narrative threads in a
key
chapter of the early Cold War."-Christopher Foss, The History
Teacher
"Clune compels us to delve more deeply into the uneasy relationship
between the sort of values that the United States claimed to stand
for during the Cold War and the sort of actions that were all too
often a result of the growing national security state."-Bevan
Sewell, Passport
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