
In the Shadow of War
According to Sherry, America's militarization began partly in response to threatening forces and changes abroad, but its internal sources and consequences in the long run proved more telling. War--as threat, necessity, or model of unified action--persistently justified the state's growing size, power, and activism. But as national government waged "war on poverty," war on AIDS," and "war on drugs," it fostered expectations of "victory" that it could not fulfill, aggravating the very distrust of federal authority that leaders sought to overcome and encouraging Americans to conceive of war as something they waged against each other rather than against enemies abroad. The paradigm of war thereby corroded Americans' faith in national government and embittered their conflicts over class, race, gender, religion, and the nation's very meaning. Sherry concludes by speculating on the possibility of ending America's long attachment to war.
- Undertitel
- The United States since the 1930s
- Författare
- Michael S. Sherry
- ISBN
- 9780300072631
- Språk
- Engelska
- Vikt
- 903 gram
- Utgivningsdatum
- 1997-11-03
- Förlag
- Yale University Press
- Sidor
- 624
