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Dynamic of Destruction: Culture and Mass Killing in the First World War: Making of the Modern World

Autor Alan Kramer
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 noi 2008
On 26 August 1914 the world-famous university library in the Belgian town of Louvain was looted and destroyed by German troops. The international community reacted in horror - 'Holocaust at Louvain' proclaimed the Daily Mail - and the behaviour of the Germans at Louvain came to be seen as the beginning of a different style of war, without the rules that had governed military conflict up to that point - a more total war, in which enemy civilians and their entire culture were now 'legitimate' targets. Yet the destruction at Louvain was simply one symbolic moment in a wider wave of cultural destruction and mass killing that swept Europe in the era of the First World War. Using a wide range of examples and eye-witness accounts from across Europe at this time, award-winning historian Alan Kramer paints a picture of an entire continent plunging into a chilling new world of mass mobilization, total warfare, and the celebration of nationalist or ethnic violence - often directed expressly at the enemy's civilian population.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780199543779
ISBN-10: 0199543771
Pagini: 450
Ilustrații: 33 black and white haltones and 5 maps
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Making of the Modern World

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

Review from previous edition This stimulating, scholarly and shrewd book is as rich in original ideas and accounts of unfamiliar aspects of World War I as it is energetic in its revisionism.
This stimulating, scholarly and shrewd book is as rich in original ideas as it is energetic in its revisionism.
A sobering book with a bleak message, but one that needs to be heard.
No serious student of the history of the twentieth century can afford to ignore this book.

Notă biografică

Alan Kramer is Professor of history at Trinity College, Dublin. He has published widely on German and Italian history in the twentieth century, including (with John Horne) German Atrocities, 1914: A History of Denial, which won the Fraenkel Prize for Contemporary History and the 2002 Western Front Association's Norman B. Tomlinson, Jr. Book Award for the best work in English on the Great War.