The Return of History and the End of Dreams by Robert Kagan, Holter Graham (Read by)

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(Compact Disc - 3 hrs)

  • Publisher: BBC Audiobooks America
  • Pub. Date: April 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9781602834323
  • Sales Rank: 359,513
  • Edition Description: 3 hrs
 
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The Barnes & Noble Review

Robert Kagan’s title says it all: history did not come to an end with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. The idea -- the dream -- that liberal democratic ideals and market economics had triumphed over all competitors has proved illusory. This fact has been obvious enough for some time now, but it has taken time for the true lineaments of the picture to come into focus, because it has taken time for the new arrangements to shake down into a discernable pattern.

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Synopsis

Hopes for a new peaceful international order after the end of the Cold War have been dashed by sobering realities: Great powers are once again competing for honor and influence. Nation-states remain as strong as ever, as do the old, explosive forces of ambitious nationalism. The world remains “unipolar,” but international competition among the United States, Russia, China, Europe, Japan, India, and Iran raise new threats of regional conflict. Communism is dead, but a new contest between western liberalism and the great eastern autocracies of Russia and China has reinjected ideology into geopolitics. Finally, radical Islamists are waging a violent struggle against the modern secular cultures and powers that, in their view, have dominated, penetrated, and polluted their Islamic world. The grand expectation that after the Cold War the world would enter an era of international geopolitical convergence has proven wrong.

For the past few years, the liberal world has been internally divided and distracted by issues both profound and petty. Now, in The Return of History and the End of Dreams, Robert Kagan masterfully poses the most important questions facing the liberal democratic countries, challenging them to choose whether they want to shape history or let others shape it for them.

The New York Times - David E. Sanger

…a brief and wonderfully argued volume on how the world has a nasty habit of spinning off in its own directions…The cold war may be over, he declares in The Return of History and the End of Dreams, but anyone who thinks the result was really "the end of history"—a consensus that liberal democracy is the future—should take another look. "The world has become normal again," Kagan says in the first sentence of what is less a book than an extended essay. Deeper in, he puts his argument more plainly: "Autocracy is making a comeback."

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Biography

Robert Kagan is senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Transatlantic Fellow at the German Marshall Fund, and a columnist for The Washington Post. He is also the author of A Twilight Struggle: American Power and Nicaragua, 1977–1990, and editor, with William Kristol, of Present Dangers: Crisis and Opportunity in American Foreign and Defense Policy. Kagan served in the State Department from 1984 to 1988. He lives in Brussels with his family.

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