The Cold War: Bipolarity to Multipolarity
Facilitators – Ronald Lesko & Tim Thomas
Dates & Times – Wednesdays, Nov. 7-Dec. 5, 12noon-2pm (skip Nov. 21)
Location – Blue Hill Public Library, Howard Room
Remember the Cold War? Historical bookends of this period are the Yalta Conference and the collapse of the
Lowell (Tim) Thomas is a retired Philadelphia lawyer who was an English major in college but now enjoys reading and discussing American History.
Ronald J. P. Lesko is a retired and reformed Professor of Political Science, Political Theory and Philosophy, State University of New York.
"The Cold War: Bipolarity to Multipolarity"
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A Message from the Facilitators:
Guidance for Participants
Guidance for Participants
Think about your own and your family’s reaction to the events of the Cold War. Do you know anyone who bought a bomb shelter? During World War II, did you think favorably of Stalin? Was Chairman Mao an evil person? Did you have any military service that brought you into contact with events of the period?
This Colloquy gives you a choice among three books that discuss the Cold War. We ask that you obtain any one of the three (all three if you like) and read designated portions for purposes of participating in the session discussions.
The three are:
- John Lewis Gaddis, The Cold War, A New History, Penguin Books (2005);
- Melvin P. Leffler, For The Soul of Mankind, Hill and Wang (2007); and
- Vladislav M. Zubok, A Failed Empire, University of North Carolina Press (2009).
In each of the four meetings, we plan to cover the following:
1st session: Beginning to Cuban Missile Crisis
Reading: Gaddis: pp. 5-82; Leffler: pp 11-156; or Zubok: pp. 1-149
Reading: Gaddis: pp. 83-188; Leffler: pp. 157-259; or Zubok: pp150-238
3rd session: Pope Visits Poland to Opening of the Berlin Wall
