David G. Haglund is professor of political studies at Queen's University in Ontario, Canada, and author of The US "Culture Wars" and the Anglo-American Special Relationship.
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"Ever since the time of Lafayette, France and America have been squabbling sisters who depend on each other but can't quite get along. David G. Haglund deftly draws on the concept of strategic culture to explain why they can't help pushing each other's most sensitive buttons."--Jack Snyder, author of From Voting to Violence: Democratization and Nationalist Conflict "France and America, the two beacons of human rights and republican democracy, should naturally be the closest allies. Yet their relations are marred by cultural divergencies, the absence of a large French diaspora in the U.S., and clashes of individual leaders. Haglund's colorful exploration of all angles makes for a riveting read."--Beatrice Heuser, author of War: A Genealogy of Western Ideas and Practices "Haglund delves into the concepts of strategic culture and identity to take the reader through an incredible journey across more than three centuries of French-American relations."--Luca Ratti, author of A Not-So-Special Relationship: The US, the UK, and German Unification, 1945-1990 "The United States and France are long-standing allies but also an odd couple. In Sister Republics, Haglund aptly utilizes the concept of strategic culture to provide a rich and elegantly written analysis of the deep-seated springs of that suboptimal yet special relationship."--Frederic Heurtebize, author of Le Peril Rouge: Washington Face a L'Eurocommunisme

