Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations
The fourth edition of Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations reconceptualizes this long-established classic to focus squarely on methods: not what we do, but how we do what we do. It presents revised, sharply focused essays on methods for researching national security, development, political economy, gender, religion, race, emotion, and nongovernmental organizations, alongside entirely new contributions on digital resources, spatial analysis, technology, materials, the natural world, the interaction of race and empire, US-Indigenous relations, ideology, and culture. The chapters are bracketed with an essay that assesses changes in the conception of US foreign relations history, and with an overview of how US foreign relations history is practiced in China. The essays, by scholars who have made a significant contribution in their areas of specialization, highlight conceptual approaches and methods that, taken together, offer an innovative and practical 'how-to' manual for both experienced scholars and newcomers to the field.
- Completely revised and updated edition, with sixteen entirely new chapters providing the most up-to-date methodological tool for teaching US foreign relations history
- Focuses on methods, approaches, and methodologies so students of foreign relations history will be able to apply and evaluate them in their own work
- Features innovative scholarship from both experienced scholars and newcomers to the field, ensuring readers gain a comprehensive understanding
Product details
December 2025Paperback
9781009447980
426 pages
229 × 152 mm
Not yet published - available from December 2025
Table of Contents
- Introduction Frank Costigliola and Barbara J. Keys
- 1. Three left turns Ryan M. Irwin
- 2. Digital resources David Langbart
- 3. Materials Gretchen Heefner
- 4. Development and growth Stephen Macekura
- 5. Capitalism Alex Beasley
- 6. Ecological footprints and other forms of spatial analysis Kristin Hoganson
- 7. Medicine, science, and the environment Julia F. Irwin
- 8. Technology and national security Katherine C. Epstein
- 9. National security Melvyn Leffler
- 10. Ideology Christopher McKnight Nichols
- 11. Race Kaysha Corinealdi
- 12. Race and empire Kristin Oberiano
- 13. US-Indigenous relations Elspeth Martini
- 14. Religion Emily Conroy-Krutz
- 15. Gender Megan Threlkeld
- 16. Culture Andrew Rotter
- 17. Meaning and emotion Frank Costigliola
- 18. Nongovernmental organizations Barbara J. Keys
- 19. The view from China Niu Ke
- Index.