Frank Costigliola is Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Connecticut. His books include Roosevelt's Lost Alliances, which won the Robert H. Ferrell Prize for best book from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. A former president of SHAFR, he received SHAFR's Graebner Lifetime Achievement Award in 2022. Barbara J. Keys is Chair of US History at Durham University. She is a past president of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations and a past winner of the Society's Stuart Bernath Lecture Prize. Her first book Globalizing Sport won the Society's Myrna Bernath Prize.
'Costigliola and Keys' impressive volume offers an invigorating look under the hood of historical practice in the study of US foreign relations. Its contributors present the reader with a gleaming toolkit for assembling scholarship at once solid and fluid, grounded and cutting-edge. Current and future historians interested in how the United States fits into a wider world would do well to keep this new how-to manual within reach.' Megan A. Black, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'These marvelous essays by a dream team of the field's leading senior scholars and early career rising stars cultivate a critical awareness of the innovative methods that are transforming how American foreign relations history is written today. Deeply reflective and written in an accessible hands-on style, they take up approaches drawn from studies of science and technology, the environment, material culture and Indigeneity along with histories of capitalism, race, empire and grand strategy to collectively offer an indispensable primer on how to remake our understanding of America in the world.' Mark Philip Bradley, The University of Chicago 'Costigliola and Keys have done something I thought impossible: improving something that already seemed perfect. Moving beyond the first edition's goal of reminding students and scholars that studying foreign affairs still mattered, their new edition of Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations displays the field's originality, vibrancy, and most of all necessity, offering a one-stop introduction to the contours of America's path to global primacy from the nineteenth to the twentieth centuries, and the questions raised by wondering if it will retain that position in the twenty-first.' Jeffrey A. Engel, David Gergen Director, Center for Presidential History, SMU