In October 1962, the fate of the world hung on the American response
to the discovery of Soviet nuclear missile sites in Cuba. That
response was informed by hours of discussions between John F. Kennedy
and his top advisers. What those advisers did not know was that
President Kennedy was secretly taping their talks, providing future
scholars with a rare inside look at high-level political deliberation
in a moment of crisis. Talk at the Brink is the first book to examine
these historic audio recordings from a sociological perspective. It
reveals how conversational practices and dynamics shaped Kennedy's
perception of the options available to him, thereby influencing his
decisions and ultimately the outcome of the crisis. David Gibson looks
not just at the positions taken by Kennedy and his advisers but how
those positions were articulated, challenged, revised, and sometimes
ignored. He argues that Kennedy's decisions arose from the
intersection of distant events unfolding in Cuba, Moscow, and the high
seas with the immediate conversational minutia of turn-taking,
storytelling, argument, and justification. In particular, Gibson shows
how Kennedy's group told and retold particular stories again and
again, sometimes settling upon a course of action only after the most
frightening consequences were omitted or actively suppressed. Talk at
the Brink presents an image of Kennedy's response to the Cuban missile
crisis that is sharply at odds with previous scholarship, and has
important implications for our understanding of decision making,
deliberation, social interaction, and historical contingency.
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Deliberation and Decision during the Cuban Missile Crisis
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400842438
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
256
Forfatter