Available Formats
From World War to Postwar: Revolution, Cold War, Decolonization, and the Rise of American Hegemony, 1943-1958
By (Author) Andrew N. Buchanan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
22nd February 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
General and world history
940.53
Paperback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Offering a global account of the long World War II, this book challenges conventional narratives that picture a clearly defined war period (1939-1945) followed by a distinct postwar era dominated by the encroaching cold war. Arguing instead that while some aspects of the war did end abruptly in 1945, in many corners of the world war bled directly and raggedly into the postwar such as Allied Occupation in Italy, the civil war in Greece, the rise of US hegemony and struggles for national liberation in India. From World War to Cold War shows how critical developments in the latter half of the 20th century were a direct result of the Second World War, and reconceptualizes the conflict as an intersecting series of regional wars as well as an overarching world war. Offering new ways to think about how the war shaped the second half of the 20th century, this book reaches into those regions often overlooked in the study of WWII. Showing how wartime relations between the US and Latin America played a crucial role in the worldwide development of US hegemony, how WWII accelerated the retreat from Empire in Sub-Saharan Africa and how it encouraged the growth of anti-colonialism in regions around the world, Buchanan offers a truly global account of the outcomes of the largest conflict in human history, and challenges the temporal boundaries in which we view it.
Andrew Buchanan is Senior Lecturer at University of Vermont, USA. He is the author of American Grand Strategy in the Mediterranean during World War II (2014) and World War II in Global Perspective, 1931-1953 (2019).