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Author Judis, John B.

Title Grand illusion : critics and champions of the American century / John B. Judis.

Publication Info. New York : Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1992.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Manchester, Main Library - Non Fiction  973.9 JUDIS    Check Shelf
Edition First edition.
Description 344 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [319]-326) and index.
Summary On the eve of America's entry into World War II, Time magazine's Henry Luce proclaimed the onset of an American Century in which our values and goods would dominate the globe. Now, fifty years later, Americans have become anxious that this era is drawing to a close, taking with it the pride of world power and the promise of unbroken prosperity. Grand Illusion is about the dreams of glory and the forebodings of crisis with which American politicians and political thinkers have envisioned the country's rise and decline. It is, above all, the story of their illusions--from liberal hopes of a global New Deal to conservative fears of a Cold War Armageddon to reactionary yearnings for a paradise lost. John Judis's lucid, insightful exploration of the American Century begins with Herbert Croly, the founder of The New Republic and advisor to Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, whose ideas for a progressive America were dashed at Versailles after World War I. It closes with George Bush, a conservative President dreaming of a "next American Century" but haunted by a nightmare of decaying cities and an economy crippled by debt. Where Woodrow Wilson's America had to learn to assume world leadership, George Bush's America must now confront the equally daunting task of sharing it. Focusing on the individuals who shaped the nation's philosophy and policies--including George F. Kennan, Richard Nixon, and Lee Iacocca, and also former Communist spy Whittaker Chambers and former Vice President Henry Wallace--Judis portrays an America trying to reconcile its dreams with its realities, its principles with its commitments. How these politicians, statesmen, and intellectuals sought to do this--and how they failed--is a tale whose lessons are vital in determining the country's future course.
Contents Prologue: America After the American Century -- 1. Herbert Croly and the New Nationalism -- 2. Henry Wallace and the Century of the Common Man -- 3. Walter Lippmann, George Kennan, Paul Nitze, and the Origins of the Cold War -- 4. Whittaker Chambers: The Cold War as Armageddon -- 5. James Burnham: Cold War Machiavelli -- 6. William Fulbright and Barry Goldwater: The Realist and the Ideologue -- 7. Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger: The Long View and the Short One -- 8. Ronald Reagan: The Good Vibrations of Decline -- 9. Lee Iacocca: The Car Salesman as Industrial Statesman -- 10. George Bush and the Next American Century -- Epilogue: The Beginning and the End of the American Century.
Subject United States -- Civilization -- 20th century.
United States -- Foreign relations -- 20th century.
ISBN 0374165947: $25.00
9780374165949
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