Articles
Was the Cold War driven by the superpowers or the periphery?
History in Focus invited ten academics to answer this question from their own research perspective. The resulting pieces, listed below, illustrate the breadth and depth of historical research relating to the Cold War. Different perspectives, different foci and different methodologies have guided the authors of these articles, and we hope they will be of interest to historians and students of the Cold War, and of the military, political, cultural and social history of the second half of the twentieth century.
Articles index
Introductions to the question
Cold War and the periphery
by John Kent
The world the superpowers made
by Jeremi Suri
Cultural aspects
The Cold War and the early space race
by Matthew Godwin
Superpowers and periphery: a religious perspective
by Dianne Kirby and Michael Mahadeo
Periphery and centre: German musicians in the early Cold War
by Toby Thacker
Cultural drives by the periphery: Britain's experiences
by Aiko Watanabe
Regional perspectives
Cold War on the periphery: the case of King Hussein of Jordan
by Nigel Ashton
Who used whom? Baathist Iraq and the Cold War, 1968–1990
by Geraint Hughes
The Berlin Wall crisis: the view from below
by Patrick Major
A home front in the Cold War: Hungary, 1948–1989
by Mark Pittaway