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Full-time Faculty
Richard C. Thornton
Professor of History and International Affairs
Phillips 331
801 22nd Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20052
Phone: (202) 994-6230
Fax: (202) 994-6231
E-mail: rthornto@gwu.edu
Education:
Ph.D., University of Washington
Expertise:
History of US-Russian and Sino-Russian relations
Background:
Professor Thornton received his B.A. from Colgate (1961) in Russian and Far Eastern Affairs and his Ph.D. in history from the University of Washington, with emphasis on the modern histories of the United States, Russia, China, and Japan. He has taught at GW since 1967. Currently Thornton offers undergraduate and graduate courses on: American foreign policy since World War II, Twentieth-Century China, and Sino-Soviet relations.
His major works include: The Reagan Revolution, I: The Politics of U.S. Foreign Policy (2003); Odd Man Out: Truman, Stalin, Mao and the Origins of the Korean War (2000); The Falklands Sting: Reagan, Thatcher, and Argentina's Bomb (1998); The Carter Years: Toward A New World Order (1991); The Nixon-Kissinger Years: Restructuring American Foreign Policy (2001); and China: A Political History (1982).
Courses Taught:
Hist
137 History of American Foreign Policy (WW II to 1975)
Hist
138 History of American Foreign Policy (1975 to "New World Order")
Hist
188 History of Chinese Communism
Hist
253 Seminar: Sino-Soviet Relations, 1917-1949
Hist
254 Seminar: Sino-Soviet Relations, 1950-present
Hist
255 Readings Seminar: History of U.S-Sov Relations, 1945-1965
Hist
256 Readings Seminar: U.S.-Soviet Strategic Relations 1968-88
Hist
259 Seminar: Problems in U.S.-Soviet-Chinese Relations
Hist
260 Seminar: Problems in U.S.-Soviet-Chinese Relations
Hist
280 Seminar: Problems in U.S.-Soviet-Chinese Relations
Last update: 03.22.05