Robert A. Taft: Ideas, Tradition, and Party in U.S. Foreign PolicyRowman & Littlefield, 2005 - 243 strani Robert A. Taft, the son of president and chief justice William H. Taft, is one of twentieth-century America's most prominent conservative legislators. Elected into office ten months before the outbreak of the Second World War, Taft quickly established himself as a leader among the anti-interventionists, fervently supporting legislation intended to keep the nation from engaging in another international war. In the years following the war, Taft embraced balance-of-power theories that he had belittled in earlier years, and his political arguments fell increasingly within the framework of anti-communism. First and foremost a consummate politician, Taft viewed the Republican party as the nation's most effective political instrument of progress. Robert A. Taft: Ideas, Tradition, and Party in U.S. Foreign Policy furnishes both an intellectual and historical context for Taft's twentieth-century conservatism. In this long overdue analysis, Clarence E. Wunderlin, Jr. explores Taft's ideological ties to the hundred-year long sweep of Whig and Republican party theory and practice. Building upon these foundations, Wunderlin carefully examines the concept of American nationalism that formed an important component of Taft's political thinking. Robert A. Taft is an original, engaging study that will be of great value to political theorists and those interested in twentieth-century intellectual history and political philosophy. |
Vsebina
Education of a Senator | 9 |
The Fight Against Intervention | 33 |
Wartime Debates Postwar Vision | 71 |
Critic of Postwar Liberalism | 107 |
Cold Warrior | 143 |
Mr Republican | 177 |
Conclusion | 207 |
Bibliographical Essay | 219 |
229 | |
About the Author | |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Robert A. Taft: Ideas, Tradition, and Party in U.S. Foreign Policy Clarence E. Wunderlin Prikaz kratkega opisa - 2005 |
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
according to Taft administration's advocated African Americans Allied anti-interventionist anticommunism arms army assistance bill billion Britain British bureaucracy campaign capital Cold Cold War Committee communist conception Congress conservative controls Deal debate defense Democrats diplomacy domestic economic Eisenhower employment enterprise established European exports federal government FEPC force Foreign Policy freedom global Herbert Hoover Ibid industrial internationalist investment Korean labor LC/RATP leaders legislation Lend-Lease liberal liberal internationalism liberty loans Marshall Plan ment military mobilization neutrality nomic Ohio senator Papers of RAT Policy for Americans political postwar presidential principles production quoted in Patterson reconstruction Republican Party Robert Robert Taft Roosevelt RT Speech Secretary Senator Taft senator's social Soviet Union strategic Taft believed Taft declared Taft family Taft's threat tion trade tradition treaty Truman administration Truman Doctrine U.S. foreign U.S. Senate University Press votes wartime Western Europe William Howard Taft Yalta York
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 2 - Tis our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances, with any portion of the foreign world." "Taking care always to keep ourselves, by suitable establishments, on a respectable defensive posture, we may safely trust to temporary alliances for extraordinary emergencies.
Stran 2 - ... frequent controversies, the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate ourselves by artificial ties in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics, or the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities. Our detached and distant situation invites and enables us to pursue a different course.