The P-38 can opener of postmodern historical texts. Recommended for any librarian who has to catalog inscrutably theoretical books.
Readers also enjoyed "The Cuban Missile Crisis", according to Goodreads.
How did they know? I enjoyed the first 5 minutes of the Cuban Missile Crisis, because I thought my daddy had come home early from work to play with me.
(The rest of the day, not so much. My father said "Turn on the set." As Kennedy was speaking on the small black and white screen, it quickly became clear there was a reason all the scientists were sent home early from the defense lab. The adults really didn't know what was going to happen. Even the smart adults with PhDs at the lab weren't sure what you are supposed to do if the world is about to end. So they thought it best to send everyone home to spend time with their families.)
If you have a long academic career ahead of you, endless days to fill as an undergrad, or are really, really bored in retirement, perhaps you will enjoy converting plain English descriptions into obtuse, Latinate jargon. For me, I still prefer phrases like "the social values of the day," "a cultural leitmotif', "let us examine the philosophical underpinnings and moral implications of the terminology we are using in our analysis," "this group was often arbitrarily assigned personal characteristics which may have reflected individual or social prejudices, rather than the demonstrable or quantifiable characteristics of members of the group."
However, if you want tenure or need to impress a dissertation committee, you probably can't write like that anymore!
You will benefit greatly from adopting the inscrutably abstract manner of expression so ably laid out in this clear and articulate primer.