Gentlemen of the blade : a social and literary history of the British Army since 1660

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Gentlemen of the blade : a social and literary history of the British Army since 1660

G.W. Stephen Brodsky

(Contributions in military studies, no. 70)

Greenwood Press, 1988

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Bibliography: p. [177]-181

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Brodsky contends that three factors--constitutional, commercial, and technological--in turn, have caused Britain to raise large citizen forces. Because Britain traditionally has been an unmilitary state which has not maintained large standing armies, this ethos of amateurism merged with the professionalism of the Regular Army. He argues that it is this unique influence of amateurism which historically has been central to the British profession of arms and vital to its spirit of service. A wide range of prose and poetry illustrates that spirit and the military cultural experience in which it evolved in Great Britain from the Restoration through World War II. In an overview of later developments, including the Falklands War, Brodsky enunciates the challenge facing the traditional ethos in the nuclear age. Analyzing the effect of the literary idiom, he questions the future direction of representative literature.

Table of Contents

Illustrations Preface Acknowledgments Introduction That Devouring Profession: The Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Regular Army A Sort of Public Nuisance: The Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Citizen Militia The Devil's Code: The Regular Army in the Industrial Age The Shrieking Pyre: The Citizen Martyr in the Great War A Just Cause: The Institutionalizing of Amateurism Since the Great War Conclusion Bibliography Index

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