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Kirkus Reviews,
September 1, 1997
The American Encounter:
The United States and the Making of the Modern World
PUBLISHER: Basic (656 pp.) $ 35.00 Oct.
1, 1997
Hoge and Zakaria,
respectively editor and managing editor of Foreign Affairs, have
collected 43 articles to commemorate the journal's 75 years of publication.
Perhaps the most
interesting characteristic of this volume is not its overview of a changing
world during a turbulent century, but rather the subtle indications of
a changing perception of that world. Many of the names and topics are
expected: Kennan on containment of the Soviets; Kissinger on diplomacy;
Morgenthau on foreign intervention; Brzezinski on the Cold War. But there
are also surprises, especially during the earlier decades: renegade Marxist
Kautsky on Germany after WW I; Italian philosopher Croce on liberty in
the 1930s; Soviet theorist Bukharin on imperialism; and anthropologist
Mead on what later came to be known as North-South relations. Together
the selections constitute a short intellectual history of foreign-policy
concerns. Despite the often gloomy realities, the early contributions
are characterized by a belief that ideas matter and that a wide range
of them are worth considering. The postWW II period is dominated by a
narrower discourse of national interest within shared assumptions about
a bipolar world. After the demise of the Soviet Union, the articles share
a sense of discovery that the world is a much more complex place than
could ever have been imagined during the Cold War. This evolution in the
mindset dominating the pages of Foreign Affairs reflects both the journal's
failure and its success. Its goal, announced in the lead article of the
first issue, was to educate the broad public about foreign events and
issues. It has remained, however, largely a forum for the intelligentsia.
The evidence that
the experts have learned a lot over the years, however, suggests that
the journal nevertheless deserves its reputation as the place for serious
discussions of foreign policy. Well worth reading.
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