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Paradoxes of Nostalgia

Cold War Triumphalism and Global Disorder since 1989

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In Paradoxes of Nostalgia Penny M. Von Eschen offers a sweeping examination of the cold war's afterlife and the lingering shadows it casts over geopolitics, journalism, and popular culture. She shows how myriad forms of nostalgia across the globe—from those that posit a mythic national past to those critical of neoliberalism that remember a time when people believed in the possibility of a collective good—indelibly shape the post-cold war era. When Western triumphalism moved into the global South and former Eastern bloc spaces, many articulated a powerful sense of loss and a longing for stability. Innovatively bringing together diplomatic archives, museums, films, and video games, Von Eschen shows that as the United States continuously sought new enemies for its unipolar world, cold war triumphalism fueled the ascendancy of xenophobic right-wing nationalism and the embrace of authoritarian sensibilities in the United States and beyond. Ultimately, she demonstrates that triumphalist claims that capitalism and military might won the cold war distort the past and disfigure the present, undermining democratic values and institutions.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 25, 2022
      University of Virginia historian Von Eschen (Satchmo Blows Up the World) delivers a scattershot study of how the end of the Cold War brought about “a powerful sense of loss and longing for stability, status, and the predictability of everyday life” in the U.S., the former Soviet Union, and other countries. She convincingly argues that the West’s understanding that capitalism had “won” the Cold War contributed to a sense of “triumphalism” that resulted in insufficient responses to the Bosnian and Rwandan massacres and forever wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Less persuasive is Von Eschen’s argument that America’s Cold War nostalgia was rooted in a longing for an era when “people trusted government to provide such agreed-on necessities as quality public education and affordable health care,” which overlooks the Reagan administration’s dismantling of the social safety net. Elsewhere, Von Eschen unconvincingly claims that the loss of Eastern bloc adversaries “emboldened” American conservatives to place “the onus for systemic racism on oppressed people of color,” and cites the closing of a James Bond–themed restaurant in Berlin as evidence that Western nostalgia for the Cold War is “jealous” and “defensive” and can’t match the “melancholy allure” of Eastern nostalgia. In its eagerness to puncture U.S. hubris and spotlight the virtues of socialism, this revisionist history misfires.

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  • OverDrive Read

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  • English

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