Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors' preface
- Preface
- Introduction: Toward the Marshall Plan: from New Era designs to New Deal synthesis
- 1 Searching for a “creative peace”: European integration and the origins of the Marshall Plan
- 2 Paths to plenty: European recovery planning and the American policy compromise
- 3 European union or middle kingdom: Anglo–American formulations, the German problem, and the organizational dimension of the ERP
- 4 Strategies of transnationalism: the ECA and the politics of peace and productivity
- 5 Changing course: European integration and the traders triumphant
- 6 Two worlds or three: the sterling crisis, the dollar gap, and the integration of Western Europe
- 7 Between union and unity: European integration and the sterling–dollar dualism
- 8 Holding the line: the ECA's efforts to reconcile recovery and rearmament
- 9 Guns and butter: politics and diplomacy at the end of the Marshall Plan
- Conclusion: America made the European way
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction: Toward the Marshall Plan: from New Era designs to New Deal synthesis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors' preface
- Preface
- Introduction: Toward the Marshall Plan: from New Era designs to New Deal synthesis
- 1 Searching for a “creative peace”: European integration and the origins of the Marshall Plan
- 2 Paths to plenty: European recovery planning and the American policy compromise
- 3 European union or middle kingdom: Anglo–American formulations, the German problem, and the organizational dimension of the ERP
- 4 Strategies of transnationalism: the ECA and the politics of peace and productivity
- 5 Changing course: European integration and the traders triumphant
- 6 Two worlds or three: the sterling crisis, the dollar gap, and the integration of Western Europe
- 7 Between union and unity: European integration and the sterling–dollar dualism
- 8 Holding the line: the ECA's efforts to reconcile recovery and rearmament
- 9 Guns and butter: politics and diplomacy at the end of the Marshall Plan
- Conclusion: America made the European way
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Original accounts of the Marshall Plan, or the European Recovery Program as it was known officially, hailed this celebrated enterprise as evidence of America's assumption of world leadership after the Second World War. Together with the North Atlantic Treaty and other instruments of Cold War diplomacy, the Marshall Plan supposedly marked the end of the isolationist era and the beginning of what Henry Luce called the “American Century.” This interpretation paralleled that found in older works on domestic history. These works viewed the New Deal as a second American revolution, the domestic equivalent of the revolution in American diplomacy engineered by Cold War policymakers in the 1940s. More recent works, to be sure, have begun to overturn the older interpretation. Those on domestic history have portrayed twentieth-century developments as part of a larger historical process by which Americans adjusted their economic and political institutions to the profound transformations brought on by industrialization. In these works, the liberal critique embedded in older scholarship, which separated the New Deal of the 1930s from the New Era of the 1920s, has given way to interpretations that consider both eras related parts of the modern American search for a new economic and political order.
Scholars of American diplomacy have been slow to pursue this theme. Recent works in this field have failed to connect the trends in domestic history to those in the history of foreign relations or to note how institutional adaptations at home influenced the direction of policy abroad.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Marshall PlanAmerica, Britain and the Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947–1952, pp. 1 - 25Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1987