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Sharing the Blame for the Cold War

Historians from the 1970s until 1989, such as John Lewis Gaddis, advocated a hybrid of the first two interpretations ('orthodox' and 'revisionist'), known as the ‘post-revisionist’ view.

Even-handed

Even-handed

  • This school of thought was more even-handed in the way it apportioned responsibility.
  • This was a trend across history as an academic subject at this time.
After 1989

After 1989

  • From 1989 onwards, given the availability of new Soviet archives in Moscow and the fall of the communist regime, new interpretations of the Cold War have emerged.
  • In spite of the extra evidence, historians do not agree entirely.
  • But, there was a shift towards criticising the Soviet Union more heavily again, as historians like John Lewis Gaddis have done.
Jump to other topics
1

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5

Did the US Contain the Spread of Communism?

6

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