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Cold War Cultures and Globalisation

Third Text, 2012
Conventional analyses of the Cold War rely on a static binary division between the US and the USSR. This article, focusing on art and film production in Italy between 1946 and 1963, reveals a more complex and dynamic interaction between cultures beyond this binary.
Gardner, AM, Nicholls, MD, White, AG
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COLD WAR CULTURES

2012
The Cold War was not only about the imperial ambitions of the super powers, their military strategies, and antagonistic ideologies. It was also about conflicting worldviews and their correlates in the daily life of the societies involved. The term “Cold War Culture” is often used in a broad sense to describe media influences, social practices, and ...
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Revisiting the cultural Cold War

Social History, 2010
In 1946 Churchill's ‘iron curtain’ speech delivered to an American audience in Fulton, Missouri, provided an early marker for the onset of the Cold War; ‘peace that is no peace’ in Orwell's prescie...
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Cold War Studies and the Cultural Cold War in Asia

2009
Until recently, historians of the Vietnam War thought Vietnam was pushed into the Soviet camp because the United States failed to respond to Ho Chi Minhs repeated appeals for support from 1945 to 1950. In this conventional view, the United States missed many opportunities to avoid what would become a costly Vietnam War in the 1960s.
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Culture and the Cold War

2003
The Cold War was more than simply a political confrontation. Each side strove ceaselessly to prove that their respective systems were superior in every possible way. That this competition should involve the field of culture is hardly surprising. Cultural competition is relatively inexpensive; it can attract a worldwide audience, and does not risk ...
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The Cold War Cultures and Beyond

2020
The chapter examines how the Cold War changed the inflections of four cultural areas, focusing primarily on the United States, but also discussing its ramifications around the world. First, the chapter looks at cultural production, including music, movies and literature, and how these were shaped by Cold War concerns.
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Culture Workers of Cold War Hollywood

Dissent, 2011
From High Noon to The Ten Commandments, from low-budget horror films like Them! to noir melodramas like Panic in the Streets, Hollywood was a key arena for the giant U-turn in American politics that took place in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Long-time Village Voice film critic J.
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Cold War Narratives

2013
Cold War Narratives reveals the power that representations, understood as both cultural production and public discourse, have held in shaping the imaginaries of early Cold War America. By engaging conflicting accounts of the 1950s as either affirmations of a prosperous and content nation (in TV shows, popular sociology, and advertising) or as critiques
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