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      • The late 1940s marked the origin of what the journalist and political philosopher Walter Lippmann called, in 1947, the “Cold War,” denot-ing the emerging confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union.1 The term remained in use as a shorthand description of Soviet-American relations and an explanation of most of American foreign policy until 1989 or 1990.
      assets.cambridge.org/97805217/63622/excerpt/9780521763622_excerpt.pdf
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  2. Lippmann was the first to bring the phrase "Cold War" to a common currency, in his 1947 book by the same name. [24] [25] It was Lippmann who first identified the tendency of journalists to generalize about other people based on fixed ideas.

  3. Lippmann’s essays would be collected under the title, The Cold War (1947). He had used the phrase “Cold War” before, but this time it would stick. America’s fifty-year showdown with the Soviet Union was branded by someone who thought it was a fool’s errand. 2

  4. In early September 1947, the renowned political commentator Walter Lippmann published the first in a syndicated series of fourteen news columns under the common title “Cold War”. The columns would be published in a book that same autumn: The Cold War: A Study in U.S. Foreign Policy .

  5. Sep 17, 2012 · The cold war; a study in U.S. foreign policy. by. Lippmann, Walter, 1889-1974. Publication date. 1972. Topics. Cold War.

  6. Looking a little old, with heavy pouches under his eyes, 58-year-old Walter Lippmann—author of 19 books, New York Herald Tribune columnist since 1931—sat down to put together his thesis, which...

  7. Sep 19, 2018 · Riccio says that when Lippmann did address civil rights in the mid-1950s, he did so through a Cold War lens. Jim Crow made America look bad internationally, diminishing its global appeal.

  8. The late 1940s marked the origin of what the journalist and political philosopher Walter Lippmann called, in 1947, the “Cold War,” denot-ing the emerging confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union.1 The term remained in use as a shorthand description of Soviet-American relations and an explanation of most of American ...

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