000 a
999 _c31692
_d31692
008 230412b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780691233765
082 _a940.5311
_bHAS
100 _aHaslam, Jonathan
245 _aSpectre of war : international communism and the origins of World War II
260 _bPrinceton University Press,
_c2022
_aPrinceton :
300 _axvi, 481 p.;
_c25 cm
365 _b27.95
_cUSD
_d85.90
490 _aPrinceton studies in international history and politics
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
520 _aThis book is a global history of the Interwar period, which posits a new history for the origins of the Second World War. Jonathan Haslam argues that it was not only the failures of the treaties that ended the First World War that led to the Second, as has traditionally been supposed. Rather, fear of international communism hampered the Great Powers and prevented the necessary diplomatic steps to contain the aggression of Germany and Japan to a much greater extent and much earlier in history than previous scholarship has recognized. Haslam looks at newly discovered and neglected archival materials around the world to show how communism as a social and political force shaped the politics in countries as diverse as Britain, Spain, France, as well as the U.S., China, and European colonies in the 1920s and 1930s. Both Communism and fear of communism were essential components of the period's political and class divides within Europe, the Weimar crisis, the Great Depression, and colonial conflicts around the world. These social factors formed the essential background to the grand political dramas in each country, explaining for example why France seemed timid, Britain appeased, and the U.S. self-isolated. Haslam expertly brings together domestic and international politics as well as the European and Asian theaters to shed new light on this pivotal period of history in new ways. Ultimately, he shows that international communism was much a more significant factor in the diplomatic failures that permitted Japan's increased aggression and Hitler's rise to power than was previously thought.
650 _aCommunism
650 _aSocial stratification
650 _aDiplomatic relations
650 _aEurope
650 _a World warII
650 _aDiplomacy
650 _aPolitical ideologies
650 _aFrance
650 _a Germany
650 _aHitler
650 _aItaly
650 _aJapan
650 _aSoviet Union
942 _2ddc
_cBK