War : a cruel necessity? : the bases of institutionalized violence
著者
書誌事項
War : a cruel necessity? : the bases of institutionalized violence
Tauris Academic Studies, c1995
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注記
Bibliography: p. 240-251
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This is an examination of the forces that sustain war as an institution. The persistence of violence is considered over a wide geographical range and the authors examine such factors as the ways in which the motivation for war is socialized in children and fed by militarism, the myths of war in the popular imagination and the representation of war by the media.
目次
- Part 1 Persisting violence: the warring state in China as institution and idea, Mark Lewis
- payback and ritual in war in New Guinea, Gilbert Lewis
- communal violence in northern Ghana - unaccepted war, Susan Drucker-Brown
- nationalist imaginings of war in Cyprus, Yiannis Papadakis
- families in conflict - pervasive violence in Northern Ireland, Dominic Murray
- a very modern war - terror and territory in Bosnia-Hercegovina, Cornelia Sorabji. Part 2 Enhancing motivation: war and peace - the socialization of children, Sharon Smith and Linda Siegel
- war and militarism, Hylke Tromp
- the knights of the sky and the myth of the war experience, George Mosse
- the role of the mass media in modern wars, Jo Groebel
- patriotism and nationalism, two components of national identity with different implications for war and peace, Sy Feshbach
- war and religion - an unholy alliance?, Helen Watson. Part 3 The sub-institutions: modern Japan and war - a problem with the past, Joe McDermott
- economics and conflict, Robert Nield
- lack of parliamentary accountability and its effect on arms build-up, Scilla Elworthy
- the arms trade, Michael Brzoska.
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