The First World War : an agrarian interpretation
著者
書誌事項
The First World War : an agrarian interpretation
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1991
- : pbk
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注記
Bibliography: p. [409]-437
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This is a completely new interpretation of the First World War. Dr Offer weaves together the economic and social history of the English-speaking world, the Pacific Basin, and Germany, with the development of food production and consumption. He argues that the roots of Germany's defeat went back to the late-Victorian decline of British agriculture and the development of Canada, Australia, and the United States as agrarian exporters, while the agrarian interests of
America and Australia were crucial in shaping the peace. The book examines the relation between economic and military power, and legal and moral questions of selecting civilians as a strategic target.
目次
- List of plates
- List of tables
- List of figures
- Introduction: Economic and social interpretation of the First World War
- Part I: How was Germany defeated?: Society under siege: Germany, 1914-1918
- Food reform and food science
- Did Germany really starve?
- Food and the German State
- Collapse
- Part II: The Agrarian Bond: The United States, Canada, and Australia: Late-Victorian Britain - an import economy
- Causes of the Agricultural Depression, 1870-1924
- The sod House against the manor house
- `Like rats in a trap' - British urban society and overseas opportunties
- Coast, interior, and metropolis
- Wheat and Empire in Canada
- Asian labour on the Pacific rim: The struggle for exclusion, 1860-1907
- Part III: The Atlantic ori entation: Fear of famine in British war plans, 1890-1908
- Power and plenty: Naval mercantilism, 1905-1908
- The dominion dimension
- Morality and Admiralty: `Jacky' Fisher, economic warfare, and International law
- Blockade and its enemies, 1909-1912
- Preparation and action, 1912-1914
- Part IV: The other side of the North Sea: Economic development and national security in Wilhelmian Germany
- Germany: Economic preparation and the decision for war
- `A second decision for war' - The U-boat campaign
- Neither dominion nor peace: Germany after the Armistice
- Conclusion
- List of sources cited
- Index
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