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The Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute series on diplomatic and economic history ;

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Books in this Series

Allies at war

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This major work transcends the conventional sub-cultures of academic history by bringing economic, social, military, and diplomatic history back together where they belong. Allies at War represents a collaborative effort among British, American, and Russian scholars - with the Russian contributions being among the first fruits of access to Soviet archives - in which all the historians have attempted to set aside the accumulation of patriotic myth and political ideology that have characterized many Cold War studies of World War II. Strategy, economy, the home front, and foreign policy are each studied "nationally" and in the context of the other members of the alliance. Allies at War therefore represents a pioneering attempt to see the wartime alliance as both "national" and "international" history.

The Second Quebec Conference Revisited: Waging War, Formulating Peace

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The Second Quebec Conference Revisited is a remarkable collection of essays resulting from an international conference of American, British, and Canadian scholars organized by McGill University, the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute, and the FDR Library to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Second Quebec Conference. The essays examine the critical state of Allied relations in the fall of 1944, when the possibility that the war in Europe might soon end produced unexpected strains in the transatlantic Alliance. In addition, the essays discuss the important, though often overlooked, Canadian contribution to the war. Overall, The Second Quebec Conference Revisited provides a new and enlightening perspective on the historical significance of the Second Quebec Conference.