Jonathan Neale Bücher






This latest addition to The New Press's People's History series offers an incisive account of the war America lost, from the perspective of those who opposed it on both sides of the battlefront as well as on the homefront. The protagonists in Neale's history of the "American War" (as the Vietnamese refer to it) are common people struggling to shape the outcome of events unfolding on an international stage―American foot soldiers who increasingly opposed American military policy on the ground in Vietnam, local Vietnamese activists and guerrillas fighting to build a just society, and the American civilians who mobilized to bring the war to a halt. His narrative includes vivid, first-person commentary from the ordinary men and women whose collective actions resulted in the defeat of the world's most powerful military machine.
What's Wrong with America?
- 288 Seiten
- 11 Lesestunden
The consequences of American domestic and foreign policy on international spheres are shrewdly assessed in this clear-sighted exposé. Unique reflections of the international financial markets show the extreme challenges created by the U.S.-led tactics of globalization, industry, and war. Comprehensively analyzing America's policies from a protestor's point of view, this incisive critique shows how devastating the inequalities are on a global level and how important major changes are to stability in world relations.
Are war and inequality inevitable, because evolution made men competitive and dominant? Think again with this entertaining yet powerful new history of 'true' human nature.