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vii Acknowledgments At first, I thought I could write this book quickly and without much aid. Of course, like most academics caught in the passion of discovery, I was mistaken . The scope of the research would not have been possible without the assistance of several institutions and individuals. I have also benefited from the critical insights of colleagues who read my first drafts. To all these people and institutions I am truly indebted, although, of course, the views expressed herein are my own. My first acknowledgment goes to the Fulbright College of the University of Arkansas, and more specifically to the History Department, for allowing considerable leeway with my teaching load, and for showing trust and encouragement through a number of travel grants, a generous summer research stipend, and additional support during my off-campus assignments. History Department Chairs Jeannie Whayne, David Sloan, and especially Lynda Coon have been my strongest advocates with the college administrators . This has been true until the finish line, when, in times of budget cuts and restrictions, Professor Coon not only offered a subsidy from the History Department’s own account but also obtained one from the office of Fulbright College Dean William Schwab to help cover the printing costs of this sizeable manuscript. I am also deeply obliged to the Nobel Peace Institute of Oslo, Norway, which is to be singled out, among the external institutions, as the most supportive and encouraging one for my project. My six months there in 2007 as a research fellow were not only the most productive in the whole time span of this work; they were also the most insightful, thanks in part to the frequent discussions I was privileged to have with an elite group of historians. With the Nobel Institute’s director, Geir Lundestad, I continue to have fruitful discussions. Geir and I may agree on many things and agree to disagree on many others. What matters most is that he, like the other members of the Nobel fellowship, perfectly fulfills the program’s mission: as Geir constantly reminded each of the institute’s fellows, our task was to push one another to the limit, with candid and sometimes brutal criticism, as we faced the difficult tasks of adopting an interdisciplinary as well as truly international approach to history, and of writing on many issues that may still be controversial . Swiss historian Benedikt Schoenborn and the genuinely Norwegian Asle Toje, the other two recipients of this fellowship so fortunately resumed that year, patiently considered my arguments, and discussed matters of anti- viii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Americanism with me. Joining us at the end, the renowned Dutch director of the European Association of American Studies, Rob Kroes, helped ease my “pain” in dealing with the rather elusive notion of Americanization. The Nobel Institute is also exemplary in its library staff: I especially thank Anne C. Kjelling and Bjørn H. Vangen for their help finding rare source material . My research in the United States, which included visits to presidential libraries stretching from New England to Kansas, would not have been possible without the additional support I received through a George C. Marshall /Baruch Research Grant from the George C. Marshall Foundation and through Truman Library and Ford Library travel grants. All three archives also must be recognized for their remarkably helpful staffs, comparable to that I once experienced at the Eisenhower Library. The Ford Library offered perhaps the most enthusiastic support, showing me the treasure of material on international relations in this frequently overlooked archival source. The Carter Library, too, should be noted for its prompt and effective release of material through its electronic resource access. My research experience in the United States also bears the memory of the iconic archivist at the National Archives and Records Administration, Sally Kuisel. I concur with the list-server H-Diplo, who recently so admiringly paid homage to Sally’s memory. In France, despite the restrictions still applied to the French Communist Party’s documentation, archivist Pascal Carreau directed me to unexpectedly informative files and paper collections of some of the party leaders, a discovery that prompted me to extend my stay in Paris. At the Gramsci Institute in Rome I was even more fortunate to gain access to documents of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) up to the late 1970s. My special thanks go to Giovanna Bosman, and to my colleague and fellow Florentine Silvio Pons, the institute’s director. Silvio has been not only supportive but enthusiastic about discussing with...

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