The Dominican Revolution of 1965
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18,95 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
The Dominican Revolution of 1965 - Democracy, Dictatorship, and the American Intervention That Divided a NationIn 1965, the Dominican Republic became the stage for one of the Cold War's most revealing conflicts. From the shadow of Rafael Trujillo's brutal dictatorship to the brief democratic experiment of Juan Bosch and the violent U.S. military intervention that followed, this book traces a nation's struggle to define its destiny between freedom and control.Through vivid narrative and meticulous research, The Dominican Revolution of 1965 explores the causes, battles, and consequences of the civil war that split the country-and the conscience of an era. Readers will follow the rise of young officers like Francisco Caamaño Deñó, the fall of idealism under pressure, and the moment when democracy itself became a battlefield between hope and fear.Balanced, powerful, and deeply human, this work reveals how a small Caribbean nation became a mirror of the global tension between sovereignty and superpower intervention. It is both a historical study and a moral reflection on what happens when a people's right to self-determination collides with the politics of empire.
The Dominican Revolution of 1965 - Democracy, Dictatorship, and the American Intervention That Divided a NationIn 1965, the Dominican Republic became the stage for one of the Cold War's most revealing conflicts. From the shadow of Rafael Trujillo's brutal dictatorship to the brief democratic experiment of Juan Bosch and the violent U.S. military intervention that followed, this book traces a nation's struggle to define its destiny between freedom and control.Through vivid narrative and meticulous research, The Dominican Revolution of 1965 explores the causes, battles, and consequences of the civil war that split the country-and the conscience of an era. Readers will follow the rise of young officers like Francisco Caamaño Deñó, the fall of idealism under pressure, and the moment when democracy itself became a battlefield between hope and fear.Balanced, powerful, and deeply human, this work reveals how a small Caribbean nation became a mirror of the global tension between sovereignty and superpower intervention. It is both a historical study and a moral reflection on what happens when a people's right to self-determination collides with the politics of empire.
AmazonPagina's: 80, Paperback, Independently published
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