Totalitarianism : the inner history of the Cold War | WorldCat.org
Gleason examines the history of totalitarianism as a model for explaining twentieth-century political systems, beginning with the term's inception in Fascist Italy, through its influence on American foreign policy and scholarship during the cold war, to its current significance in political debate and policy worldwide. Originally published in 1995.
Print Book, English, 1998
Oxford University Press, New York, 1998
[9], 307 pages ; 23 cm
9780195050189, 0195050185
229907011
IntroductionOne.: Fascist OriginsTwo.: A New Kind of State: Italy, Germany, and the Soviet Union in the 1930sThree.: Wartime in the English-Speaking WorldFour.: The Cold WarFive.: Brainwashing: Communist China as a Totalitarian StateSix.: Searching for the Origins of TotalitarianismSeven.: "Totalitarianism" Among the SovietologistsEight.: The Cold War in Postwar Europe: France, Italy, and GermanyNine.: The Cold War in Eastern EuropeTen.: The "Evil Empire"Epilogue. The Russians Call Themselves TotalitarianNotesIndex