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America After the Cold War
- The First Thirty Years
- Narrated by: Patrick N. Allitt
- Length: 5 hrs and 47 mins
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Publisher's Summary
History is filled with surprises, not the least of which, was the very idea of America. Who would have ever imagined that a scruffy backwater of states could defeat one of the world’s great empires, forge an identity, and become a global superpower? Most surveys of American history show you the stunning rise of America and take you through the Cold War, a story that includes the tumultuous conflict in Vietnam and the cultural upheaval of the 1960s.
The 30 years of contemporary history following the fall of the Soviet Union, however, tend to get short shrift, perhaps because this period of history is still being written, or perhaps because the end of the Cold War is a natural stopping point, an inflection point when one story ends and something new - something unpredictable - begins. Nonetheless, events of today have been profoundly shaped by the past several decades, and one must understand this recent history to understand the world today.
Contemporary life is changing so rapidly that it can be breathtaking to take a step back and look at the cohesive “story” from 1990 to 2019, but this is precisely what America After the Cold War: The First Thirty Years offers. Taught by esteemed professor and Great Courses favorite Dr. Patrick Allitt of Emory University, these 12 fascinating lectures tie all the threads of contemporary life together to give you a rich understanding of the world we live in now.
America has always been something of a paradox - a colony turned superpower, a productivity dynamo with a widening gulf between rich and poor, and a land of the free that has abetted inequality and racial injustice. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, it seemed the US was poised for a new era of growth, equality, and peace, yet history is messy. The story of the United States is ongoing, but by synthesizing events and illuminating them within a context, Professor Allitt offers a fascinating exploration of contemporary America.
What listeners say about America After the Cold War
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- J B Tipton
- 05-05-20
Very consistent
Progressive good. Conservative bad. Who knew this history stuff was so simple. Back it goes.
10 people found this helpful
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- CaptEnder
- 04-26-20
A overview only
I’ve enjoyed professor Allitt before and I still find him an enjoyable lecturer but his political biases come out here in full swing - he has a clear professional class center left liberal bias. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing and can be still be very informative for people who have no background in the subject but for those who want more of a deep dive or more interesting analysis of the period should go elsewhere.
9 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 05-28-20
disappointed
I listen to lectures during my 4 mile walk every day. Having listened to Industrial Rev and Victorian Eng, by Dr. Allitt, both of which were superb in all aspects, I expected more of the same. Although I was reminded of events that have slipped away and some recent events were clarified, several topics showed a clear bias. Dr. Allitt, English by birth, announced he had become a US citizen. Apparently, he has switched from tea to Kool-Aid.
5 people found this helpful
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- Philo
- 03-20-20
Solid, good to see the story all in one place
I lived through all this, and there was nothing here I hadn't seen or thought along the way. But, those with a bent toward history can get the whole period (USA-centric) in a neat package. It is basically the headline stories of those 30 years, from the most basic, popular shared view of events, without a lot of frill.
4 people found this helpful
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- Craig
- 06-16-21
History is supposed to be facts, not rhetoric.
I have loved Dr. Allitt's courses and have listened to several. This was written as though designed for the modern university - which is to say written with a deliberate and decided bias. I'd be fine with a choice here and there, and I'd forgive a lean - we all have our preferences - but this wasn't good history. History aims to find as much fact as possible and eliminate bias, or at least admit to multiple sides in a discussion. There were no attempts made to write this from anything but an, "honest as possible", left bent.
It's unfortunate, Dr. Allitt is an extraordinary presenter, bringing history to life in ways few others can. I hope future efforts with him will prove more rewarding.
3 people found this helpful
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- CodyPeacock12349
- 09-28-20
A great course but with one major issue
So Patrick is a fantastic narrator, and this audiobook is well researched and short, but it's incredibly Americentric. Still, for the length and price one can't beat the overall excellence of this work.
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- Andrew
- 06-10-22
Mostly just a list of events
Mostly just a list of events, almost all of which you would already be aware of.