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In: Politics and Society in Modern America 73
Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface to the 2011 Edition -- INTRODUCTION -- CHAPTER 1. Coming to Terms with Cold War Civil Rights -- CHAPTER 2. Telling Stories about Race and Democracy -- CHAPTER 3. Fighting the Cold War with Civil Rights Reform -- CHAPTER 4. Holding the Line in Little Rock -- CHAPTER 5. Losing Control in Camelot -- CHAPTER 6. Shifting the Focus of America's Image Abroad -- CONCLUSION -- Notes -- Acknowledgments -- Index
Mary Dudziak's Exporting American Dreams tells the little-known story of Thurgood Marshall's work with Kenyan leaders as they fought with the British for independence in the early 1960s. Not long after he led the legal team in Brown v. Board of Education, Marshall aided Kenya's constitutional negotiations, as adversaries battled over rights and land--not with weapons, but with legal arguments. Set in the context of Marshall's civil rights work in the United States, this transnational history sheds light on legal reform and social change in the midst of violent upheavals in Africa and America
In: Politics and society in twentieth-century America
In 1958, an African-American handyman named Jimmy Wilson was sentenced to die in Alabama for stealing two dollars. Shocking as this sentence was, it was overturned only after intense international attention and the interference of an embarrassed John Foster Dulles. Soon after the United States' segregated military defeated a racist regime in World War II, American racism was a major concern of U.S. allies, a chief Soviet propaganda theme, and an obstacle to American Cold War goals throughout Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Each lynching harmed foreign relations, and "the Negro problem" became a central issue in every administration from Truman to Johnson. In what may be the best analysis of how international relations affected any domestic issue, the author interprets postwar civil rights as a Cold War feature. She argues that the Cold War helped facilitate key social reforms, including desegregation. Civil rights activists gained tremendous advantage as the government sought to polish its international image. But improving the nation's reputation did not always require real change. This focus on image rather than substance - combined with constraints on McCarthy-era political activism and the triumph of law-and-order rhetoric - limited the nature and extent of progress. Archival information, much of it newly available, supports the author's argument that civil rights was Cold War policy. But the story is also one of people: an African-American veteran of World War II lynched in Georgia; an attorney general flooded by civil rights petitions from abroad; the teenagers who desegregated Little Rock's Central High; African diplomats denied restaurant service; Black artists living in Europe and supporting the civil rights movement from overseas; conservative politicians viewing desegregation as a communist plot; and civil rights leaders who saw their struggle eclipsed by Vietnam. Never before has any scholar so directly connected civil rights and the Cold War. Contributing mightily to our understanding of both, the author advances a wave of scholarship that corrects isolationist tendencies in American history by applying an international perspective to domestic affairs. In her preface to this edition, the author discusses the way the Cold War figures into civil rights history, and details this book's origins, as one question about civil rights could not be answered without broadening her research from domestic to international influences on American history. -- Adapted from publisher's description.
Mary Dudziak's Exporting American Dreams tells the little-known story of Thurgood Marshall's work with Kenyan leaders as they fought with the British for independence in the early 1960s. Not long after he led the legal team in Brown v. Board of Education, Marshall aided Kenya's constitutional negotiations, as adversaries battled over rights and land--not with weapons, but with legal arguments. Set in the context of Marshall's civil rights work in the United States, this transnational history sheds light on legal reform and social change in the midst of violent upheavals in Africa and America.
In: Diplomatic history
ISSN: 1467-7709
In: Ethics & international affairs, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 109-111
ISSN: 1747-7093
In: Michigan Law Review, Forthcoming
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In: Diplomatic history, Band 45, Heft 3, S. 489-497
ISSN: 1467-7709
In: 117 Michigan Law Review 1179 (2019).
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In: Forthcoming in an edited collection: World War II and the West it Wrought, Mark Brilliant and David Kennedy, eds. (Stanford University Press).
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Working paper
In: Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, Band 30
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Working paper
In: Diplomatic history, Band 42, Heft 1, S. 1-16
ISSN: 1467-7709
In: Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting, Band 111, S. 14-19
ISSN: 2169-1118
It is a pleasure and an honor to comment on the work of David Armitage, a historian of unparalleled reach and impact. His topic could not be more important. "Civil war has gradually become the most widespread, the most destructive, and the most characteristic form of organized human violence," he writes in his elegant and masterful recent book Civil Wars: A History in Ideas. Examining the history of the idea of "civil war" is not simply an academic enterprise. Understanding its history, he explains, "reveals the contingency of the phenomenon, contradicting those who claim its permanence and durability." Armitage's purpose is "to show that what humans have invented, they may yet dismantle … what intellectual will has enshrined, an equal effort of imaginative determination can dethrone."
In: Dissent: a quarterly of politics and culture, Band 63, Heft 3, S. 114-120
ISSN: 1946-0910