War and Revolution
The United States and Russia, 19141921
Norman E. Saul
May 2001
456 pages, 50 illustrations, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1090-7, $45.00
For Russia, it was a time of troubles:
war, famine, and social upheaval the likes of which the world
had never seen before. World War I, two revolutions in 1917,
and the subsequent civil war and Allied intervention completely
eradicated one regime and replaced it with a radically new one.
Now an award-winning diplomatic historian ties these events together
to reveal their far-reaching consequences for the future of not
only the new Soviet Union but of the United States as well.
In War and Revolution, Norman Saul offers a fresh analysis
of this troubled era in Russia and of the American reaction to
it. Tracing the events surrounding America's entry into the European
conflict and its encouragement of continued Russian participation
even in the face of domestic unrest, he shows how those circumstances
adversely affected relations between two nations and shaped their
futures in the century ahead.
Drawing on rarely accessed military and diplomatic archives
in both countries, Saul reaches beyond official actions to give
readers a vivid sense of those times. He surveys the vast panorama
of events while providing not only detailed accounts of the activities
of consular, diplomatic, and military staffs but also colorful
vignettes of ordinary Americans in Russia involved in humanitarian
relief and other activities. Businessmen and artists, Red Cross
volunteers and journalists-all were caught up in the immediacy
of war and revolution, and all contributed to the shifting sentiments
of two nations.
War and Revolution is the third volume in Saul's sweeping
history of U.S.Russian relations, already hailed for setting
"a new standard for how the history of international relations
ought to be written" (TLS). Here he further develops
the theme of "mirror-imaging," describing ways in which
Americans and Russians saw themselves as having a common relationship
distinguished from other European or Asian nations. Despite the
turmoil of this era, he explains, Russians continued to look
to America for ideas and models while Americans expected Russians
to follow their lead in developing resources and reforming institutions.
By 1921, Americans were in a quandary about Russia as its
former friend pursued a hostile course beyond U.S. control. Saul's
account of those years clearly shows how this parting of the
ways came about--and how it set the stage for a cold war that
would test both country's wills later in the century.
"A magisterial work, pioneering in its research and synthesis,
important for its emphasis on the social and economic dimensions,
and readable-not least because its cast is placed within the
formative events that set the context of most of the remaining
twentieth century."--Walter LaFeber, author of America,
Russia, and the Cold War
"An illuminating exploration of American and Russian
perceptions of one another during a cataclysmic period of war,
revolution, intervention, and civil war. It is superb."--Betty
Miller Unterberger, author of The United States, Revolutionary
Russia, and the Rise of Czechoslovakia
"It is remarkable how fresh this book seems, with its
colorful vignettes of the lives of unfamiliar people, its effective
exploitation of previously unused sources, and its many new twists
on old scholarly issues."--David Foglesong, author
of America's Secret War Against Bolshevism
NORMAN E. SAUL is professor of history and Russian
and East European studies at the University of Kansas. His previous
books on U.S.Russian relations are Distant
Friends: The United States and Russia, 17631867
and Concord and Conflict: The United
States and Russia, 18671914, winner of the 1997
Robert H. Ferrell Book Prize, both from Kansas.
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