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Modernization as Ideology. American Social Science and “Nation Building” in the Kennedy Era (review)
- Journal of Cold War Studies
- The MIT Press
- Volume 4, Number 1, Winter 2002
- pp. 99-101
- Review
- Additional Information
Journal of Cold War Studies 4.1 (2002) 99-101
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Book Review
Modernization as Ideology. American Social Science and "Nation Building" in the Kennedy Era
Michael E. Latham, Modernization as Ideology. American Social Science and "Nation Building" in the Kennedy Era. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2000. 288 pp. $18.95
Michael Latham's book is a welcome addition to the growing literature on the Kennedy years. Since the mid-1990s this literature seems to be finally emerging from the orthodox-revisionist dilemma and entering its own postrevisionist stage, allowing issues to be debated in a more detached, dispassionate way. John F. Kennedy him- self is no longer the object of a fervid attachment or of an equally fervid denigration. Latham's book combines cultural and diplomatic history in highlighting the pervasiveness of modernization theories in the decision-making process of the early 1960s. It thus gives us a valuable insight into the mindset of the "best and the brightest," vividly re-creating the sense of omnipotence that was so typical of the Kennedy team.
Latham sets out to show not only how deeply the various modernization theories shaped and affected the foreign policy-making process of the Kennedy administration, but also how they reflected the image that Americans had of themselves and of their country at the beginning of the new decade. According to Latham, modernization was not just a "political instrument" to shape and implement specific policies or "a rhetorical tool" to justify their adoption; it was also a "cognitive framework" through which U.S. intellectuals and foreign policy elites interpreted their actions and their country's role in the world. In other words, it was an ideology based on a specific set of assumptions about their country's past and present policies. As Latham indicates in his introductory chapter, this approach is clearly in line with an intellectual trend (he quotes Clifford Geertz, Michel Foucault, and Edward Said as some of the authors who have influenced his work) that explores the concepts and ideas through which power interprets the world and relates to it, since this definition of external realities allows a better understanding of the way power implicitly defines itself. [End Page 99]
The core of the book is an analysis of three distinct policy initiatives of the Kennedy administration that were clearly influenced--and perhaps determined--by modernization theories. In an introductory chapter Latham shows the development of these theories in American social science in the postwar years, as well as the close relationship between this development (in particular its obsession for objective, verifiable, and quantifiable results) and the search and competition for federal funding. In the next three chapters he focuses on the Alliance for Progress, the Peace Corps, and the strategic hamlet program in South Vietnam. Each chapter follows a similar structure: The story of each initiative is described with reference to the abundant literature, memoirs, and primary sources (though here and there there are some omissions: in the chapter on the strategic hamlets, for instance, William Colby's memoirs are not even mentioned), and the author then traces the influence of the modernization theories on each project and considers how the theories reflected the same assumptions of previous "imperial" ideologies of American foreign policy, such as Manifest Destiny.
In these central chapters the most original contribution is not the descriptive part--all three aspects of Kennedy's foreign policy have been repeatedly explored--but the way in which Latham shows us how modernization theories gave the Kennedy team supreme confidence that the United States had found the key to solve the problems of Third World development and win the confrontation with the Soviet Union in this particular arena of the Cold War. Latham is at his best when he shows the limits of this framework. The administration's faith in the new "scientific" approach and in its capacity to define each country's place on the universal path toward the ideal model of development--a model based on Western societies, in...