The Culture of the Second Cold War

By (author) Richard Sakwa

Publication date:

04 February 2025

Publisher

Anthem Press

Dimensions:

229x153mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781839992971

The work examines the metapolitics of the Second Cold War. The focus is less on the detailed analysis of diplomatic history and processes in international politics, and more on the underlying attitudes and ideologies that have generated and sustained Cold War 2. The work examines the definition of a Cold War and reasons for the persistence of this form of international politics, as well as the clash over interpretations of the causes of renewed conflict. The work then looks at how this Cold War is being conducted, including renewed militarism, the suppression of dissent, the decline of diplomacy and the reduced opportunities for dialogue. The instruments of the Cold War 2 include sanctions and the reinterpretation of history and memory wars. Many of the familiar methods drawn from Cold War 1 are now applied, but in novel ways to reflect technological change as well as the different ideological contexts. The position of the global South in this Cold War is examined, and the work ends with some reflections on possible ways this Cold War could end.

‘Richard Sakwa is one of the world’s most astute students of Russia and its relations with the outside world. He is at his best in The Culture of the Second Cold War, where he explains how the world ended up in a new cold war when so many thought that the First Cold War, which ended in 1989, would be the last conflict of that sort.’ — John J. Mearsheimer, R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago