Prøve GULL - Gratis
The chill factor
New Zealand Listener
|August 16-22, 2025
Soviet scholar's new book on the Cold War dispels myths and shows how much it still influences thinking in the present day.

Do we remember the Cold War properly? The Berlin Wall came down in 1989, when the median-aged New Zealander today was 2 years old. We may have been raised on stories of bomb drills, sabre rattling and missile crises, but most of us do not remember them first-hand. The wars we recall were warmer but less all-engulfing - more readily contained in either the Middle East or now Eastern Europe.
Yet, as the Cold War recedes into history, it is clear this 46-year period still structures so much of our everyday world and the thinking of our leaders. Vladimir Putin is the most obvious example of a leader scarred and shaped by it, but he is far from alone. It is hard not to see a Cold War nostalgia in the way Washington treats Beijing, or indeed to miss the references our own Foreign Affairs Minister - named after one of the original Cold Warriors - makes to the period.
The new book by Soviet scholar Vladislav Zubok is perfect as both a primer and an antidote. It's just the right length (544 pages) to give you a brisk rundown of how the Cold War started, its leadership-driven cycles of détente and hostility, and how it ended, all without testing your patience too much.
Denne historien er fra August 16-22, 2025-utgaven av New Zealand Listener.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener
What's in a label?
Why finally getting a health diagnosis can bring relief – but a so uncertainty.
2 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
TV Films
The big movies on TV this week
2 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
History lessons
For his second novel, Airana Ngarewa draws from his own whakapapa to tell the story of a survivor of Tītokowaru's war.
4 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
Sam's summons
Sam Neill gathered a Kiwi-heavy cast for his third season of courtroom drama The Twelve, set in Western Australia.
3 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
Who's the moss?
\"Are you crazy?” This is what Bob is wondering. He has written to me to explain a few things, some of it about moss, though mostly about his opinion of me. It seems that, at least in Bob’s view, I am a pitiable idiot who is unworthy to exist in the same beautiful world as moss.
2 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
Clever and crammed
Trent Dalton's latest has truth, lies and delusion at its heart.
3 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
And your bird can sing
Once half of The Chicks, Suzanne Lynch marks 60 years in the music biz with a memoir that touches on the big names she's backed.
6 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
Going to extremes
In June, Melissa Hortman, leader of Minnesota's House Democratic caucus, was murdered, along with her husband, by anti- abortionist Vance Boelter, who had already shot state senator John Hoffman and his wife, and had made a kill list of Democrats and liberal figures.
2 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
High on her own supply?
Patricia Lockwood's new novel doubles down and tests the patience of her devotees.
5 mins
October 4-10, 2025

New Zealand Listener
Centre of the storm
Jacinda Ardern doco captures her time in power in vivid detail.
2 mins
October 4-10, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size