This thesis examines and critiques the American political discourse on the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. The event itself is past, yet words used to describe and explain the missile crisis capture and give meaning to the experience. The meaning of the crisis begins in a basic sense, then, with the discourse. The increasing availability of material evidence has reinvigorated the discourse on the missive crisis. Where relevant, recent evidence will be employed to critique previous and recent interpretations of the this seminal event. Consensus and debate are both to be found in the discourse on the Cuban crisis. First, there is a large body of shared understanding, or conventional wisdom, on the crisis. Secondly, there is disagreeme...
The Cuban Missile Crisis may be equated to a dangerous game of chess played between two powerful riv...
Richard Ned Lebow and Janice Stein’s We all lost the Cold War remains an important and widely quoted...
This dissertation assesses the rhetorical dynamics of American public argumentation about the approp...
The emplacement of Soviet missiles in Cuba in October of 1962 and the American response to this acti...
This volume brings together a collection of leading international experts to revisit and review our ...
The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 was one of the most important and highly escalated confrontations o...
The traditional interpretation of the Cuban missile crisis is held by nearly all of the participants...
This text analyzes the risks that the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962 could have led to nuclear...
The Cuban Missile Crisis has been considered by political scientists and historians as one of the mo...
The Cuban missile crisis remains one of the most intensely studied events of the twentieth century, ...
October 1962, The Cuban Missile Crisis: the confrontation that brought the world closer to nuclear c...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, American History, 2006The Cuban Missile Crisis is thought ...
The Cuban Missile Crisis represented a unique moment in the history of American foreign policy becau...
Postcolonial scholars show how knowledge practices participate in the production and reproduction of...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
The Cuban Missile Crisis may be equated to a dangerous game of chess played between two powerful riv...
Richard Ned Lebow and Janice Stein’s We all lost the Cold War remains an important and widely quoted...
This dissertation assesses the rhetorical dynamics of American public argumentation about the approp...
The emplacement of Soviet missiles in Cuba in October of 1962 and the American response to this acti...
This volume brings together a collection of leading international experts to revisit and review our ...
The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 was one of the most important and highly escalated confrontations o...
The traditional interpretation of the Cuban missile crisis is held by nearly all of the participants...
This text analyzes the risks that the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962 could have led to nuclear...
The Cuban Missile Crisis has been considered by political scientists and historians as one of the mo...
The Cuban missile crisis remains one of the most intensely studied events of the twentieth century, ...
October 1962, The Cuban Missile Crisis: the confrontation that brought the world closer to nuclear c...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, American History, 2006The Cuban Missile Crisis is thought ...
The Cuban Missile Crisis represented a unique moment in the history of American foreign policy becau...
Postcolonial scholars show how knowledge practices participate in the production and reproduction of...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
The Cuban Missile Crisis may be equated to a dangerous game of chess played between two powerful riv...
Richard Ned Lebow and Janice Stein’s We all lost the Cold War remains an important and widely quoted...
This dissertation assesses the rhetorical dynamics of American public argumentation about the approp...