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Book Release: Lorenz Lüthi’s ‘Cold Wars: Asia, the Middle East, Europe’

Date and time: Friday, September 25, 2020, 12 noon to 1:30 pm Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Register here [1].

We explore Prof. Lorenz Lüthi’s new book, Cold Wars, with Fawaz Gerges, Deborah Larson, Margaret MacMillan, Jennifer Welsh & Carl Bouchard

What was the Cold War that shook world politics for the second half of the twentieth century? Standard narratives focus on Soviet-American rivalry as if the superpowers were the exclusive driving forces of the international system. Lorenz M. Lüthi offers a radically different account, restoring agency to regional powers in Asia, the Middle East and Europe and revealing how regional and national developments shaped the course of the global Cold War. Despite their elevated position in 1945, the United States, Soviet Union and United Kingdom quickly realized that their political, economic, and military power had surprisingly tight limits given the challenges of decolonization, Asian-African internationalism, pan-Arabism, pan-Islamism, Arab–Israeli antagonism, and European economic developments. A series of Cold Wars ebbed and flowed as the three world regions underwent structural changes that weakened or even severed their links to the global ideological clash, leaving the superpower Cold War as the only major conflict that remained by the 1980s.

Lorenz M. Lüthi is Associate Professor at McGill University, Montréal, and is a leading historian of the Cold War. His first book The Sino-Soviet Split: Cold War in the Communist World (2008) won the 2008 Furniss Award and the 2010 Marshall Shulman Book Prize. His publications on the Vietnam war, Asian-African internationalism, and non-alignment have broken new ground in Cold War history.

Our Panelists:

Moderator: Carl Bouchard est professeur agrégé au département d’histoire de l’Université de Montréal, membre du Centre d’études sur la paix et la sécurité internationale (CEPSI), du Groupement interuniversitaire pour l’histoire des relations internationales contemporaines et du Centre d’études et de recherches internationales de l’Université de Montréal (CÉRIUM). Il enseigne et encadre des recherches supérieures autour de l’histoire des relations internationales contemporaines de la première moitié du XXe siècle, de la Première Guerre mondiale et de l’histoire de la paix. Il co-dirige pour l’année 2018-2019 le CÉRIUM.