Introduction / Frank Costigliola and Michael J. Hogan -- Theories of international relations / Robert Jervis -- National security / Melvyn P. Leffler -- Corporatism : from the new era to the age of development / Michael J. Hogan -- Explaining political economy / Brad Simpson -- Diplomatic history after the big bang : using computational methods to explore the infinite archive / David Allen and Matthew Connelly -- Development and technopolitics / Nick Cullather -- Nonstate actors / Barbara J. Keys -- Legal history as foreign relations history / Mary L. Dudziak -- Domestic politics / Fredrik Logevall -- The global frontier : comparative history and the frontier-borderlands approach / Nathan J. Citino -- Considering borders / Emily S. Rosenberg -- The privilege of acting upon others : the middle eastern exception to anti-exceptionalist histories of the US and the world / Ussama Makdisi -- Nationalism as an umbrella ideology / Michael H. Hunt -- Nation branding / Jessica C.E. Gienow-Hecht -- Shades of sovereignty : radicalized power, the United States and the world / Paul A. Kramer -- Gendering American foreign relations / Judy Tzu-Chun Wu -- The religious turn in diplomatic history / Andrew Preston -- Memory and the study of US foreign relations / Penny M. Von Eschen -- The senses / Andrew J. Rotter -- Psychology / Richard H. Immerman and Lori Helene Gronich -- Reading for emotion / Frank Costigliola.
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"Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations, 3rd Edition presents substantially revised and new essays on traditional themes such as national security, corporatism, borderlands history, and international relations theory. The book also highlights such innovative conceptual approaches and analytical methods as computational analysis, symbolic borders, modernization and technopolitics, nationalism, non-state actors, domestic politics, exceptionalism, legal history, nation branding, gender, race, political economy, memory, psychology, emotions, and the senses."--Provided by publisher.