The Lessons of History

Front Cover
Yale University Press, Jan 1, 1991 - History - 217 pages

"The vital questions which confront not only students of war but all concerned with peace and security are, why wars happen; how, if necessary, they should be fought; and above all how they can be prevented...An understanding [of these issues] is impossible without some insight into the way in which societies have developed in the past and with them their cultures and their value systems."--Michael Howard

This important book by one of the most eminent military historians in the world discusses the processes of historical change that spawned the European wars of the twentieth century. In a series of elegantly written essays, Michael Howard ponders the continuing significance of nationalism and its relationship to the growth of industrial societies, modernization, and war. He explores the conflicting ideologies that arose from industrialism, tracing the development of new political organisms and attitudes as mass communications and universal education raised and transformed the level of political consciousness throughout the world.

Howard argues that, although industrialization may tend to reduce belligerence by producing societies dedicated to material welfare rather than heroic achievement, organized violence remains a norm. In an introduction, he links these themes with the emergence of perestroika and glasnost in the Soviet sphere, with the difficulties experienced by Third World countries in creating viable political and economic communities, and with a Western bloc in which social tensions continue to increase.

 

Contents

Introduction1
1
Empires Nations and Wars
21
Prussia in European History
49
Empire Race and War in pre1914 Britain
63
The Edwardian Arms Race
81
The Doctrine
97
Europe on the Eve of the First World War
113
Ideology and International Relations
139
Churchill and the Era of National Unity
152
War and Social Change
166
Military Experience in European Literature
177
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