Esta serie se adentra en la intrincada relación entre la guerra, las estructuras sociales y las instituciones militares. Examina meticulosamente las causas, el desarrollo y las consecuencias de los conflictos, explorando su profundo impacto en la vida humana y los paisajes políticos. A través de estudios de caso detallados y análisis académicos, cada volumen ofrece perspectivas críticas sobre momentos históricos cruciales. Es una lectura esencial para cualquiera interesado en comprender la compleja dinámica de la guerra y su legado perdurable.
Explores the American public's collective memory and common perception of
World War I by analysing the extent to which it was expressed through the
production of cultural artifacts related to the war. Through the analysis of
four vectors of memoryLamay Licursi shows that no consistent image or... číst
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"In this work, David Raub Snyder offers a nuanced investigation into the German army's prosecution and punishment of sex offenders during the Second World War. In so doing, Snyder restores balance to the literature regarding the military administration of justice under Hitler and to the historiography of sexuality and the Third Reich. Although scholars have devoted considerable attention to military offenses, the literature is largely silent about crimes punishable under civilian law. Snyder notes that, contrary to conventional wisdom, soldiers on the eastern front often received severe punishments for sexual assaults on Soviet civilians. He demonstrates how military expedience and military justice became entangled and conflicted during the war. Snyder also analyzes the Wehrmacht's unique penal and parole system, the first treatment of this topic in the English language. Supported by research in Germany and detailed accounts largely unavailable in English until now, Snyder offers new perspectives on justice under the Wehrmacht and the situations of homosexuals, women, and children during wartime"--Book jacket.
Kenneth M. Swope is a history professor and director of graduate studies at the University of Southern Mississippi. He specializes in military history and has authored works including "A Dragon’s Head and a Serpent’s Tail" and "The Military Collapse of China’s Ming Dynasty."
The nineteenth century witnessed the birth of German nationalism and the unification of Germany as a powerful nation-state. In this era the reading public’s obsession with the most destructive and divisive war in its history—the Thirty Years’ War—resurrected old animosities and sparked a violent, century-long debate over the origins and aftermath of the war. The core of this bitter argument was a clash between Protestant and Catholic historians over the cultural criteria determining authentic German identity and the territorial and political form of the future German nation. This groundbreaking study of modern Germany’s morbid fascination with the war explores the ideological uses of history writing, commemoration, and collective remembrance to show how the passionate argument over the “meaning” of the Thirty Years’ War shaped Germans' conception of their nation. The first book in the extensive literature on German history writing to examine how modern German historians reinterpreted a specific event to define national identity and legitimate political and ideological agendas, The Thirty Years’ War and German Memory in the Nineteenth Century is a bold intellectual history of the confluence of history writing, religion, culture, and politics in nineteenth-century Germany.
During the First World War, mass produced, full colour, large format war posters were both a sign & an instrument of the shift in warfare, signalling the direct involvement of entire populations. This collection considers various aspects of war posters between 1914 & 1918
This accessible and highly readable account navigates the intricacies of the
British and French wars and both navies, their shipbuilding programs, naval
campaigns and battles and their strategies and diplomacy.
Examines twenty-five hundred years of human conflicts and their varied impacts
on civilian society. This book features case studies that examine what
military forces did to non-combatants in the area of their operations, and why
they did it and how they justified their actions. It focuses on the practical
realities of war.
For nearly two hundred years huge wooden warships called “ships of the line” dominated war at sea and were thus instrumental in the European struggle for power and the spread of imperialism. Foremost among the great naval powers were Great Britain and France, whose advanced economies could support large numbers of these expensive ships. This book, the first joint history of these great navies, offers a uniquely impartial and comprehensive picture of the two forces—their shipbuilding programs, naval campaigns, and battles, and their wartime strategies and diplomacy. Jonathan R. Dull is the author of two award-winning histories of the French navy. Bringing to bear years of study of war and diplomacy, his book conveys the fine details and the high drama of the age of grand and decisive naval conflict. Dull delves into the seven wars that Great Britain and France, often in alliance with lesser naval powers such as Spain and the Netherlands, fought between 1688 and 1815. Viewing war as most statesmen of the time saw it—as a contest of endurance—he also treats the tragic side of the Franco-British wars, which shattered the greater security and prosperity the two powers enjoyed during their brief period as allies.
Japan's war in Asia and the Pacific from 1937 to 1945 remains a subject of
great interest, yet the wartime Japanese army remains little understood
outside Japan. In a series of searching examinations of the structure, ethos,
and goals of the Japanese military establishment, this title offers fresh
material on its tactics, operations, and doctrine. schovat popis
For centuries prior to 1945, the German officer corps constituted a social and political elite in Central Europe. And as this book shows, the debacle of the Second World War, the scorn of the German populace, and the control of the Allies did not entirely diminish the officers' critical role. By tracing the changing role of the officer corps from its position in the National Socialist dictatorship to its current status in a Western-style democracy, Soldiers as Citizens illuminates both the development of a democratic ideology in the Federal Republic and the influence of warfare in German society. ø Jay Lockenour details how former officers in West Germany founded quasi-legal organizations with memberships numbering in the hundreds of thousands; how they lobbied the German and Allied governments for their pensions, waged public relations campaigns to restore their lost "honor," and sought input into the rearmament plan after 1950; and how, as officers, they claimed to speak with the "voice of the soldier" whose wartime experiences and sacrifices earned him a special place in the new republic. ø In Lockenour's analysis, the officer corps provides an enlightening example of a social group, ravaged by war and defeat, trying to orient itself in a hostile world. In their alternative model for democracy based on "soldierly" values, they also give us a clearer, more complex understanding of postwar history.
Describes and analyzes the military history of the six key Arab states -
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Syria - during the post-World
War II era. This book shows how each Arab military grew and learned from its
own experiences in response to the objectives set within constrained
political, economic, and social circumstances.
The year 1879 marked the beginning of one of the longest, bloodiest conflicts of nineteenth-century Latin America. The War of the Pacific pitted Peru and Bolivia against Chile in a struggle initiated over a festering border dispute. The conflict saw Chile’s and Peru’s armored warships vying for control of sea lanes and included one of the first examples of the use of naval torpedoes. On land, large armies using the most modern weapons—breech-loading rifles, Gatling guns, and steel-barreled artillery—clashed in battles that left thousands of men dead on the battlefields. Eventually, the warring parties revamped their respective military establishments, creating much needed, civilian-supported supply, transportation, and medical units. Chile ultimately prevailed. Bolivia lost its seacoast along with valuable nitrate and copper deposits to Chile, and Peru was forced to cede mineral rich Tarapaca and the province of Arica to the victor. Employing the primary and secondary sources of the countries involved, William F. Sater offers the definitive analysis of the conflict's naval and military campaigns. Andean Tragedy not only places the war in a crucial international context, but also explains why this devastating conflict resulted in a Chilean victory.