John Lewis Gaddis : The Cold War

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John Lewis Gaddis is perhaps one of the most infamous researchers. According to The New York Times, he is considered to be the “dean of Cold War Historians.” Gaddis serves as a professor of Military and Naval History at Yale University. He is well known and renounced for lecturing on the History of the Cold War and grand strategy. The Cold War: A New History is his most recent publication and he has six publications preceding the book. Yale has one of the most renounced, and well-respected History departments in the country. The department of History at Yale has over 70 total professors, allowing a vast array of areas to be studied in depth.
Part of Gaddis’ incentive to write The Cold War: A New History, were his students in his Cold War History class at Yale. Gaddis talked about how students in modern times have little understanding of the workings of the Cold War. He was often asked why more years could not be discussed in fewer pages. Books are often assigned over the history of the Cold War that covers up to 1962, which can go on for over 300 pages. The Cold War tends to get lost within the history of the world and Gaddis wants to be sure the Cold War is explained and that everyone understands how and why this Cold War is important to the United States and the rest of the world today. Gaddis makes it clear that The Cold War: A New History is primarily intended for young readers who have a limited knowledge of the Cold War.
The Cold War: A New History is written differently than other books of the same genre. The book is divided into chapters each consisting of different themes and ideas by Gaddis’ choice. Gaddis wrote the book in a way that it would not be a general overview of the Cold War; rather a scope of the ideas imp...

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...tic countries and a change in the world was underway. After communist grew so quickly, it became clear that communist did not work and democracy did work.
Gaddis did an excellent job constructing and writing The Cold War: A New History. The writing was clear and concise and does appeal to a younger audience. Instead of stating facts, Gaddis explains how and why events happened. Instead of giving the United States the entirety of the credit for ending the Cold War, Gaddis also gives credit to other world leaders as well as the populations of other countries in Eastern Europe. The Cold War led to other wars, such as the Korean War and Vietnam, which so strongly shaped the world today. All people were affected by the Cold War. If total war was to break out between the United States and the Soviet Union, it was likely that there would not have been a world left today.

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