¶ … America 1945-1960
The book, The Crucial Decade and After: America 1945-1960, published in 1966, is about the transformation of the post-World War II peace into the globalization of the Cold War. It was first written in 1956 and then edited and more sections added in 1966. Much of the material written in 1956 seems incomplete, or unfinished. The 1966 additions attempted to fill in some of the missing holes and unclear thoughts. It is mainly a historical anthology. He gives a greatly detailed account of McCarthyism. Goldman blames McCarthy for creating the cold war through protectionist politics and defensive trade positions of the between the United States. This paper will demonstrate, that while Eric Goldman is valuable as a source of details about the era, his work holds little value as a historical piece of work.
Eric Goldman was a Professor at a Princeton University who had served Mr. Johnson as a special consultant in the White House. Dr. Goldman's relationship with Mr. Johnson had been stormy, and they often disagreed on policy. Professor Goldman was kind in his criticism of Johnson and made an attempt to acknowledge views other than his own. The historian took a compassionate view of the President in retrospect.
The history was written soon after and as the events were taking place. It cannot be considered a historical account. This can skew the perspective of the author, as is the case with this work. Goldman is unable to step outside his own opinions, which often were a source of great controversy to others. In this respect this work cannot be considered a history, but instead a commentary written as the events were taking place. A history written well after the events taking place is very different than one written as they are taking place. A participant in the events is often not the best historical perspective. Many have tried to step outside their own opinions and give an objective view of the events, but few have succeeded and their works ends up being a weakly supported argument for their own views. This is the case with this work. One example is when he calls Lattimore "a non-Communist liberal who had been called into consultation infrequently by the State Department and whose suggestions had been almost totally ignored." (Goldman, 119) This is just one example, of how Goldman interjects his opinions of people through out the book. It is quite clear exactly with whom Goldman sides and agrees with and who he considers his adversary. A true history must have more objectivity.
I do not believe that the goal of Eric Goldman was to weakly promote his controversial views, but this is what the book tended to do. His true intent was to give a bird's eye view of McCarthyism and the events that led to the cold war. He did not accomplish an objective view and therefore his work cannot be considered a true history of the events. This can be compared to the works of Leon Trotsky about the Russian Revolution. Many of the same problems with objectivity can be found here as well. Histories written soon after or during the events tend to have more facts and figures that are not available after the fact, but they also tend to lack objectivity. This is the case with Eric Goldman's books.
Goldman's criticism of the works of other is often jaded with unsupported argument and therefore must regarded as shear opinion and not actual fact as in the following example,
Late in the war, the University of Chicago Press Published The Road to Serfdom by an Austrian-born economist, Friedrich A. Von Hayek. [He] had set his scholarship within a general proposition that caught perfectly the mood of American conservatism. Nazism, he contended, had not gown up on opposition to New Deal-type liberalism; such liberalism and Nazism came from the same roots. All Western Civilization had been relying...
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