Synopses & Reviews
America's foreign relations tradition, for all its successes, has not always served the American people well. Utilizing tradition as a framework of analysis of the historic American approach to foreign affairs, this book critically examines the country's international conduct over time, leading to a number of provocative and controversial conclusions.
The first section deals with ideas, ideals, and ideology in American history that provide a context and value structure that have long conditioned the American people's conception of the world. The second part critically examines the problematic American national style of interacting with others. The nation's parochial approach to problem-solving is explicated in the third section. The fourth part centers upon the country's historic isolationist-interventionist impulse—a two-sided, often contradictory dynamic. The fifth section is an extended analysis of the country's approach to alliance-building after World War II as a case study of its approach to foreign affairs in the past. The final section proposes that America's traditional values and decision-making style have often been incompatible, and this contradiction has brought forth the exorcising role of violence in American's relationships with others.
Review
Readers partial to "political culture" as a variable in explaining policy will find this book useful. The author... does present the wide array of traditions and appraoches to American foregin policy in a succinct and reader-friendly way....Upper-division undergraduates to faculty.Choice
Review
[A] thoughtful survey of the American foreign policy tradition.Foreign Affairs
Synopsis
America's historic approach to foreign affairs, while at times admirable, has frequently been injurious to the American people and others. This book argues that a proper understanding of that tradition is vital to the country's continued well-being.
Synopsis
America's foreign relations "tradition," for all its successes, has not always served the American people well. Utilizing "tradition" as a framework of analysis of the historic American approach to foreign affairs, this book critically examines the country's international conduct over time, leading to a number of provocative and controversial conclusions.
About the Author
ROGER S. WHITCOMB is Professor of American International Relations and Foreign Policy Studies at Kutztown University of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
Table of Contents
Preface: An American Paradox
Introduction: The American Tradition of Foreign Affairs
Ideas, Ideals, and Ideology in American History
Policy Imperatives: The American National Style
The Approach to Problem-Solving
The Isolationist-Interventionist Impulse
Tradition Manifest: The American Concept of Alliance
Reflections
Selected Bibliography
Index