Preface
Introduction: The Post-1945 Watershed
International Politics Reconfigured
Wilson and Lenin as Rival Visionaries World War II and the Onset of
the Cold War The Reach of Nationalism
The Global Economy in Transition
The First Phase of Globalization, 1870s-1914
Globalization Reborn, 1945 to the Present
The Colonial System on the Brink
Vulnerabilities of Empire
The Appearance of the "Third World"
Part One: Hopes and Fears Contend, 1945-1953
Chapter 1: The Cold War: Toward Soviet-American Confrontation
Origins of the Rivalry
From Cooperation to Conflict
U.S. Policy in Transition
Stalin's Pursuit of Territory and Security
The Conflict Goes Global
Drawing the Line in Europe
The Nuclear Arms Race Accelerates
Opening a Front in the Third World
Superpower Societies in an Unquiet Time
Soviet Society under Stress
The U.S. Anti-Communist Consensus
Chapter 2: The International Economy: Out of the Ruins
Anglo-American Remedies for an Ailing System Keynesian Economics
and a Design for Prosperity The Bretton Woods Agreements
The U.S. Rescue Operation
Occupation and Recovery in Japan
Recovery in Western Europe
The American Economic Powerhouse
Good Times Return
Disney and the U.S. Economic Edge
"Coca-colonization" and the Mass Consumption Model
European Resistance to "Americanization"
Chapter 3: The Third World: First Tremors in Asia
The Appeal of Revolution and the Strong State The Chinese Communist
Triumph Vietnam's Revolutionary Struggle
New States Under Conservative Elites
India's Status-Quo Independence
The Collaborative Impulse in the Philippines
Part Two: The Cold War System under Stress, 1953-1968
Chapter 4. The Cold War: A Tenuous Accommodation
The Beginnings of Coexistence Khrushchev Under Pressure
Crosscurrents in American Policy
Crisis Points
To the Nuclear Brink in Cuba
The Vietnam Quagmire
The Quake of 1968
The American Epicenter
The Ground Shifts Abroad
Chapter 5. Abundance and Discontent in the Developed World
America at the Apogee
Triumph at Home and Abroad
Warning Signs of Economic Troubles
Recovery in Western Europe and Japan The Old World's New Course The
Second Japanese Miracle
Voices of Discontent
The New Environmentalism The Feminist Upsurge Development and
Inequality
Chapter 6. Third-World Hopes at High Tide
Revolutionary Trajectories in East Asia The Maoist Experiment in
China Vietnam's Fight for the South
The Caribbean Basin: Between Reaction and Revolution
Guatemala's "Ten Years of Spring" Cuba and the Revolution that
Survived
Decolonization in Sub-Saharan Africa
Ghana and Nkrumah's African Socialism
Colonial Legacies in Ghana and Beyond
Remaking the Middle East and North Africa
Economic Nationalism in Iran
A New Order for Egypt and the Region
Colonial Crisis in Algeria
Part Three: From Cold War to Globalization, 1968-1991
Chapter 7. The Cold War Comes to a Close
The Rise and Fall of Détente The Nixon Turnaround The Brezhnev
Era
Western Europe and Détente
The U.S. Retreat from Détente
The Gorbachev Initiatives
Glasnost, Perestroika, and a New Foreign Policy
The Demise of the Soviet System
Explaining the Cold War Outcome The Role of Leaders Impersonal
Forces
Chapter 8. Global Markets: One System, Three Centers
The United States in Transition
The Stagflation Crisis
The Free Market Solution
The Rise of an East Asian Bloc Japan Stays on Course The "Little
Dragons" Stir
Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics
Vietnam in China's Footsteps
Revived Bloc Building in Europe Renewed Integration and the E.U.
Post-'89 and the Opening to the East
Chapter 9. Divergent Paths in the Third World
The Changing Face of Revolutions Cambodia's Genocidal Revolution
Religious Challenge in Iran
Revolutionary Aftershocks in the Middle East
Opposition to Settler Colonialism Apartheid under Siege Conflict
over Palestine
Repression and Resistance in Guatemala
Dreams of Development in Disarray
Stalemated Economies The Population Explosion Women and
Development
Part Four: Integration and Fragmentation: the 1990s and Beyond
Chapter 10. The Power and Perils of Globalization
The Dimensions of a New Global Order
The Pieces Fall into Place
The Magic of the Market
Creation's Destructive Side
Disrupted Lives, Torn Societies, Hollow Politics
The Specter of Inequality
An Environment under Stress
Saving People and the Planet
Agents of Reform
In the Name of Human Rights
In Defense of Life on the Planet
Chapter 11. A Regionally Configured World
The New World's New Era
Hegemonic Pretensions
Latin America Beyond the Cold War
Crosscurrents and Conflict in the Middle East
The Rise of Political Islam
Flash Points
The Return of Asia
Competing Development Models
China's Long Regional Role
The Old World's Old Problems
The EU Project in Trouble
The Geopolitical Pygmy
Final Reflections on the Post-1945 World: The Limits and Uses of
History
Recommended Resources
Notes
Index
Michael H. Hunt is the Everett H. Emerson Professor of History
Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is
the author or editor of twelve books, including The World
Transformed, 1945 to the Present: A Documentary Reader, Second
Edition (OUP, 2014) and Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy, Second
Edition (2009). He is also the coauthor, with Steven I. Levine, of
Arc of Empire: America's Wars in Asia from the
Philippines to Vietnam (2012).
"It is difficult to imagine a better history of the world from 1945
to the present than the new edition of Michael Hunt's The World
Transformed. Having added chapters that cover the post-Cold War
decades, Hunt provides a remarkably informed, balanced, and nuanced
exploration of an era of unprecedented globalization. His capacious
narrative is attentive to both the upside and perils of ever
accelerating transnational and cross-cultural connections and
is replete with vignettes that underscore human agency. The World
Transformed is the most compelling and thought-provoking assessment
available on the tumultuous quarter-century from the end of World
War II
through the present day."--Michael Adas, Rutgers University
"The second edition of Michael Hunt's The World Transformed is the
most comprehensive and up-to-date historical survey of the
post-1945 period. While the overall structure and approach remain
broadly similar to the first edition, new chapters, revisions, and
features add substantially to the book's interpretive power. Of
particular importance are the additions of two new chapters on the
post-1990 period, which offer detailed coverage of the last
quarter-century. In addition, thoroughly revised recommended
resources at the end of each chapter will allow students to pursue
the most recent research on a wide variety of subjects. It is a
terrific narrative and
analysis for any course focusing on the post-1945 period."--Heather
Streets-Salter, Northeastern University
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