Sonstiges, Englisch, 353 Seiten, Format (B × H): 1600 mm x 2400 mm, Gewicht: 725 g
Sonstiges, Englisch, 353 Seiten, Format (B × H): 1600 mm x 2400 mm, Gewicht: 725 g
ISBN: 978-90-474-2461-1
Verlag: Brill Academic Publishers
'Contested Space' fills a gap on the Persian Gulf in accounts of global Anglo-American rivalries during the Second World War. It goes beyond existing country, oil and cold war strategic studies to trace a broad ideological as well as material contest between two variants of overseas capitalism: neo-corporatist British 'guided development' and American 'new deal internationalism'. Frictions over how, respectively, to order or liberate the region and its peoples continued into the cold war era, with the 'special relationship' contingent on one power's sublimation to the other. With the USSR an intermittent factor, intra-Western frictions were more influential in postwar Persian Gulf politics, when expanding American interaction with new indigenous client-allies accelerated the unravelling of British imperialism.
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Weitere Infos & Material
Acknowledgement
Introduction: ‘Contested Space’: Anglo-American Relations in the Persian Gulf, 1939-1947.
1. Evolving British Imperialism and the Persian Gulf, 1900-1939.
2. ‘Reserving Complete Freedom’: Wartime Britain and American Regional Subordination, 1939-1941.
3. ‘Competitive Cooperation’: Emerging Anglo-American Frictions, 1942.
4. 1943: ‘Our Joint Influence Could Scarcely Be Challenged’: the Elusive Pursuit of Rapprochement.
5. 1944: ‘A Perfect Nightmare to Them’: Britain’s Search for Tenable Balance in the Persian Gulf.
6. 1945: Transition, Continuity and Shifting Anglo-American Order.
7. 1946: US Internationalism and Multilateral Security in the Persian Gulf.
8. 1947: ‘A “Loosening Up” by the British’: Anglo-American Relations, the Persian Gulf and the Onset of the Cold War.
Epilogue: Britain, the United States and the Postwar Persian Gulf; a Not So Special Relationship.
Sources and Bibliography
Index