000 03104nam a2200313u##4500
001 genk/214048
003 POUNB
005 20240110040904.0
020 _a9781594203121
_c194.00
040 _aмченко
041 _aeng
044 _aUS
100 1 _aGaddis,J. L.
_qJohn Lewis
_4aut
245 0 0 _aGeorge F. Kennan
_ban American life
_cJ. L. Gaddis
260 _aNew York, NY
_bThe Penguin Press
_c2011
300 _a784p.
520 _aThree decades in the making, the definitive, authorized biography of one of Cold War America's most prominent and most troubled grand strategists In the late 1940s, a bright but relatively obscure American diplomat named George Kennan wrote two documents, the "long telegram" and the "X" article, which set out the strategic vision that would define United States policy toward the Soviet Union until that country's collapse four and a half decades later. It would propel Kennan to dizzying heights of fame and influence. It would also bring him lasting bitterness and regret. George Kennan's was a life of contradictions. The most influential American diplomat of the early Cold War era, later a prizewinning historian, Kennan would become an outspoken critic of American diplomacy, politics, and culture. A man of great outward dignity and self-confidence, he wrestled throughout his life with passionate emotions, and with severe, almost paralyzing, self-doubt. John Lewis Gaddis began this magisterial history thirty years ago, interviewing Kennan frequently and gaining complete access to his voluminous diaries and other personal papers. So frank and detailed were these materials that both agreed that the book would not appear until after Kennan's death. The result is a biography whose candor and intimacy match its century-long sweep. We see Kennan's insecurity as a midwesterner among elites at Princeton, his budding dissatisfaction with the Foreign Service, his despair about his own country even as he was making himself the shrewdest American expert on the Soviet Union, his struggles with depression, his sharp sense of humor, his extraordinary insights on the policies and people he encountered, rendered in some of the most evocative writing of his era. Remarkably, Kennan regularly turned his analytical prowess upon himself, even to the point of recording dreams. Gaddis's biography is an astonishingly revealing view of how this greatest of Cold War strategists rejected the strategy that made his name, and came close to rejecting himself. A profound work of history and biography, George F. Kennan illuminates, with equal brilliance, the rich inner landscape of a life and the grand outer landscape of an age.
600 1 4 _aKennan G. F.
_b
_qGeorge F.
084 _a63.3(7СПО)6
_2rubbk
856 7 _2\images\I-13094_910_0.jpg
856 7 _2\images\I-13094_910_0.jpg
942 _cBOOK
090 _xG 123
991 _bgenk
_c63.3(7СПО)6/G613-484961
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _aunmediated
_bn
_2rdamedia
338 _asheet
_bnb
_2rdacarrier
999 _c1686477
_d1686477