Review
"'This is a book that, while being accessible to studnets, will be stimulating to scholars. It is a valuable contribution to Wilsonian scholarship.'" The Journal of Southern History, Feb 2004
Product Description
"I would rather lose in a cause that will some day win, than win in a cause that will some day lose!" - Woodrow Wilson
- For better or worse, Woodrow Wilson's vision of America's role in the world continues to be heard today - preserving civilization and making the world safe for democracy
- Woodrow Wilson was key player in seeking a peaceful solution to World War One - many of the principles outlined in his Fourteen Points remain with us today, enshrined in the mandate of the United Nations
- The League of Nations was one of the great political debates in US history - might its success have changed the course of world history?
Based upon the recently completed publication of the Wilson Papers,
Woodrow Wilson presents a portrait that re-examines his political career and argues that he has been misunderstood. J.A. Thompson offers an integrated interpretation of Wilson's academic career as a political scientist and university president, his style as a domestic politician and his conduct of foreign policy - topics that have generally been treated separately and very differently. The author shows that, from an early age, Wilson's chief interest was in the nature of political leadership in a democracy, and describes the great success he enjoyed when he had an opportunity to practice this role himself. Although his ultimate failure to persuade the Senate to accept the League of Nations has left a misleading impression that Wilson was an unrealistic visionary, it took great political skill to lead a largely united country into its first major attempt to shape the world beyond the Western Hemisphere. This is an alternative, more rounded and ultimately more positive portrait of this major President, showing that he was a very able and pragmatic politician. The latest work in the best-selling
Profiles in Power series.
J. A. Thompson is Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge
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