I wrote earlier:
"Due to size constraints, I'll have to spit this message into two parts. The first is a discussion from [[Talk:History of the United States (1980-1988)]]. The other major discussion we've had this year is taken from [[Talk:Cold War/temp]]. I will add that to separate e-mail."
Well, here's the second part.
[[Talk:Cold War/temp]] Taken from:http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Talk:Cold_War/temp&action=edi...
I added a couple example sentences that I think are plausible "lead sentences" for their respective sections. Also, as a way of forestalling partisan edits, I had the idea of addressing partisanship issues at the top, right after the normal lead content, and linking to a historiography article. I suspect a lot of people who have strong opinions on the Cold War don't know that all of the issues have already been debated intensely, many years ago in some cases, and so by putting historiography up close to the top we let them know that there is a body of scholarship that they ought to know about before scribbling on the article.
Another thing that I think we'll want to do is to address the distinction between objective facts (which tend not to be in dispute) and their presumed motives and causes, over which the historians call each other bad names. :-) A size limit of 20K or so will mean that the main article will have to stick mostly to facts and offer opinions on motivation less often, and the connected subarticles would then get the more in-depth analysis about cause and effect - they can also cite the more specialized books and literature for the benefit of the truly fascinated. [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 04:46, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)
I like it and think it would be a great improvement. The one thing I do not like are the many purely date headings with some though I think most of them can be made into names like Détente or the [[Vietnam War]], or descriptions like "Interventions in the Third World" or "Renewed Tensions." A danger with articles like this is that they become nothing more than timelines and leave out the crucial links and interconnections between events. - [[User:SimonP|SimonP]] 05:17, Apr 15, 2004 (UTC)
I also think we should eventually have a great number of topical spin-offs. Both because they are important topics that would not be adequately covered in 4000 words, and because we have much of the content already written. e.g: *[[Historiography of the Cold War]] (your suggestion) *[[Space Race]] (already exists) *[[Cold War in the Third World]] (and perhaps [[Cold War in the Middle East]], [[Cold War in Latin America]], [[Cold War in South Asia]]) *[[Nuclear arms race]] (currently a poor redirect) *[[Intelligence services in the Cold War]] *[[American Cold War foreign policy]] -[[User:SimonP|SimonP]] 05:17, Apr 15, 2004 (UTC)
Right now, I lean in favor Stan's proposal. Organizing the article by region is a bad idea. I'm not aware of any survey text that does this either. I favor a roughly chronological organization, but with topics in the headings instead of dates. Below is my ''very rough'' (and unfinished) draft. [[User:172|172]] 10:42, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)
* Origins ** Britain and the expansion of Tsarist Russia ** The U.S., Russia, and the development of Manchuria ** The Bolshevik Revolution and Allied intervention ** The First Red Scare in the U.S. ** Soviet-U.S. trade in the interwar years ** The Munich Conference and the Non-Aggression Pact ** Wartime mistrust ** Atlantic Charter ** Yalta ** The end of the Great Depression and international trade ** Potsdam ** Germany ** Atomic control ** United Nations ** Postwar reconstruction in Central and Eastern Europe ** The Iranian and Turkish crises of 1946
* Kennan and Containment ** George Kennan, Kennan's 'long telegram', and the "X" article in ''Foreign Affairs'' ** The crisis in Greece ** The Truman Doctrine ** The Marshall Plan and the Molotov Plan
* Truman and NSC-68 ** Chinese Revolution ** The Soviet atomic bomb ** NSC-68 ** Korea ** McCarthyism
* Eishenhower-Dulles Cold War ** Rise of Khrushchev ** Eisenhower-Dulles "new look" ** Francis Gary Power's U2 mission and the Paris Summit ** Sputnik ** H-Bomb ** De-colonization ** Defense pacts in the Third World ** Covert action in the Third World ** Mossadegh ** The CIA in Latin America ** The Suez Crisis and rifts within the Western alliance ** Indochina (The Eisenhower administration, Dienbienphu, and the Geneva Conference)
*Cold War of Kennedy-Johnson **Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis **Gulf of Tonkin Resolution **Vietnam and "flexible response" **Vietnam War...
* Rise and fall of Détente ** Threats within both blocs ** Oil shock of 1973 ** Vietnam spending and "Vietnamization" ** Arms control ** Islamic Revolution ** Afghanistan
* End of the Cold War ** Reagan administration ** "Low intensity conflicts" ** Summits ** Perestrokia and Eastern Europe ** Collapse of the USSR ** Legacies
Cool, I'll merge all these in later today or tomorrow and we can see what it looks like then. A great many of these subjects have their own articles already, although they are, uh, "variable" :-) in their depth and quality... [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 17:26, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC) :Great! Our goals seem to be one-in-the-same. But perhaps we need a little more time before we start merging things. I sketched the above outline pretty hastily, so we'll probably need to play around with the arrangements a bit. Also, just to make sure, we're creating a NI-style series with daughter articles, right? If that's the case, the existing content in the series, for the most part, runs parallel to the above outline. So writing the summary on the main page will require the most work. [[User:172|172]] 18:10, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC) ::BTW, I'm making some changes the outline draft above in this posting. [[User:172|172]] 18:41, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC)
I've now merged the bits, tinkered with some section titles. Still need to get in list of 3rd world involvements by name. Interesting that some of the key terms apparently have no article... [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 06:09, 17 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Jonah speaking, I don't know where a McCarthyism link fits in to your template, but I noticed it wasn't in the current Cold War section either. I guess someone was bound to bring it up eventually, but I'm just giving my two cents. 04 May 2004
==Kingturtle, Stan, 172 (moved here from Talk:Cold War (1947-1953) and its origins)==
This article is called ''Cold War (1947-1953) and its origins''. But the first 3/4s of the article deal with events before 1947. I think this article should be split up into ''Cold War origins'' and ''Cold War (1947-1953)''. I am going to take this bold step Friday night if no one objects. [[User:Kingturtle|Kingturtle]] 03:15, 7 May 2004 (UTC) :I agree. Stan and I are working on a possible reorganization. I'm still drafting my proposals on MS Word at home. My idea is the following split: Origins of the Cold War (to 1941), Origins of the Cold War (1941-1947), Cold War (1947-1953), Cold War (1953-1957), Cold War (1957-1962), Cold War (1962-1973), and Cold War (since 1973). Before this is done, we need to expand on some aspects of the current content.
:And this article - [[Cold War (1947-1953) and its origins]] - is hardest to split out of the three articles that exist right now. The three articles that I'm proposing (Origins of the Cold War (to 1941), Origins of the Cold War (1941-1947), Cold War (1947-1953)) will need to expand a great deal on content already posted here.
:I'd favor different organization as opposed to the one in place right now. For example, here's my idea for the organization of the to 1941 origins article: *Origins of the Cold War (to 1941) **Tsarist Russia and the 'New' Imperialism (to the 1890s) **Manchuria **The Russo-Japanese War and the West **Wartime alliance **Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War **The First Red Scare **"Socialism in One Country" **U.S. recognition of the Soviet Union (1933) **The Munich Pact and the Non-Aggression Pact
:For the next article in the series...
*Origins of the Cold War (1941-1947) **Lend-lease payments and the second front **The Atlantic Conference **Breton Woods **Yalta **Potsdam **Hiroshima and Nagasaki **The Iran Crisis **Germany and the Oder-Neisse boundary *Reparations payments and the Berlin blockade **Greece **Domestic pressures on Soviet foreign policy **Domestic pressures on U.S. foreign policy **The Truman Doctrine, the National Security Act, and the proposal of the Marshall Plan
Just to reassure you, this is all very tentative. I appreciate advice while I'm drafting my proposals. [[User:172|172]] 06:00, 7 May 2004 (UTC) *Ok, glad to hear this is already in the works. I won't make any bold moves. And I am happy to help figure things out. [[User:Kingturtle|Kingturtle]] 06:04, 7 May 2004 (UTC)
*Not to be too negative, but we '''really''' don't want to do series - a series is just chapters in a book, and here we're supposed to be doing articles, not book chapters. So for instance to pick on the 1941-1947 segment, there are thirteen topics. In a single-article design, each will get 1-2 sentences saying what it was and how it connects to the others. All in-depth stuff would go to the topics, for instance [[Yalta Conference]], which at present seems OK in terms of basic facts, but is sorely lacking the explanation of why anybody might think it was the beginning of the Cold War. Yalta's significance ''could'' be put in the main Cold War article, but that's how the main narrative becomes bloated. It also does the reader a disservice when they link to [[Yalta Conference]] from somewhere else, then can't learn about its significance without trudging through a long narrative about other things. To make the single-article goal, we have to be very disciplined. [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 00:57, 8 May 2004 (UTC)
::We have to have place for weaving it all together in contexts that can be more specified than in a single article/summary page. Everything that I'm outlining could be a daughter article of an executive summary page, like on [[New Imperialism]]. Just to reassure you, I'm certain that the vast majority of the content in all the articles I'm proposing will come from the three existing articles.
::BTW, perhaps you're misunderstanding what I'm proposing in those outlines. I'm including, say "Yalta" and "Potsdam" in the headings, but the way everything's organized makes it a more or less chronological arrangement; really you can read the subheadings as milestones acting as stand-ins signifying place and time. Thus, we wouldn't be ''just'' giving an overview of Yalta under the "Yalta" heading - to use this as an example again - in the text of the daughter article I'm proposing, but rather staying focused on developments in the spring of '45 and how they relate to the course of the emerging Cold War. [[User:172|172]] 02:11, 8 May 2004 (UTC)
:::I think we have a misunderstanding here. My goal is to have a single 20K article that covers everything. An article entitled "Cold War (1947-1953)" is completely wrong for an encyclopedia, whether as an "article in a series" or as a "daughter article". The point is not to write more and more into a single narrative, but to be succinct. The "weaving it all together" happens in the single main article. Specific events have text that connects back to the main article and to related events - that's how most of Wikipedia is written, there's no reason for this to be different. I want to be clear on this, because it seems like you generally have the urge to write single long narratives, to the point of duplicating material that is already present in existing articles. My whole point here is '''not''' to do the ever-expanding narrative; the single main article should be complete at 20K, and further expansion will occur in topical articles like [[Yalta Conference]], not in "Cold War (15 April 1950 - 23 May 1950)". [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 05:30, 8 May 2004 (UTC) ::::Well, these articles don't even exist yet, and we might as well agree to disagree until then. I'll help you out with the 20K summary page, but there's no harm having additional daughter articles, which will be able to draw the vast majority of their content from the existing pages. [[User:172|172]] 11:41, 8 May 2004 (UTC)
== End of participation ==
I'm no longer going to work on this, it's going to be way too frustrating. Use, delete, whatever. [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 16:47, 19 May 2004 (UTC) :Okay, I'm not going to delete it - you had a number of good ideas that I'd like to adopt at some point. I hope that this isn't an overreaction to one disagreement on Vietnam War. I think that you are being a bit cranky about that article, but that doesn't taint my opinion of your contributions to other articles, the vast majority of which are supurb, IMHO. [[User:172|172]] 16:54, 19 May 2004 (UTC) ::This is an overall reaction to all your reverting and arguing on various articles; just looking at it makes me want to quit working on WP altogether, so I'm cutting loose instead, will spend time in areas where I find the people more enjoyable to work with. [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 17:32, 21 May 2004 (UTC) :::Do you have disagreements of substance with any of my recent changes to other articles, aside from Vietnam War? Or are you just coming here to mouth off and insult me? [[User:172|172]] 17:43, 21 May 2004 (UTC) ::::I have a whole host of disagreements with your edits, but it would give me an ulcer to deal with all of them, and WP doesn't pay me enough for that. Your reference to "insult" here is a perfect example; I just gave you the straight facts about how I felt, anything else is in your own mind. [[User:Stan Shebs|Stan]] 12:11, 22 May 2004 (UTC) :::::I have a whole host of disagreements with your edits as well, but you don't see me taking it personally and negative character judgments against you. Lighten up. [[User:172|172]] 21:49, 22 May 2004 (UTC) ::::::Now that we have that [[Vietnam War]] disagreement behind us, do you want to start work on this article again? [[User:172|172]] 04:46, 24 May 2004 (UTC)
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