Anticipating total war : the German and American experiences, 1871-1914

Bibliographic Information

Anticipating total war : the German and American experiences, 1871-1914

edited by Manfred F. Boemeke, Roger Chickering and Stig Förster

(Publications of the German Historical Institute)

German Historical Institute , Cambridge University Press, 1999

Available at  / 14 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

These essays explore the discourse on war in Germany and the United States between 1871 and 1914 - in the era bounded by the mid-century wars in Europe and North America and the First World War. The concept of 'total war', which was prefigured in aspects of the earlier conflicts and realized in 1914, provides the analytical focus. The essays reveal vigorous discussions of warfare in several forums - among soldiers, statesmen, women's groups and educators - on both sides of the Atlantic. Predictions of long, cataclysmic wars were not uncommon in these discussions, while the involvement of German and American soldiers in colonial warfare suggested that future combat would not spare civilians. Despite these 'anticipations of total war', virtually no one drew the practical implications in planning for war in the early twentieth century.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction Roger Chickering and Stig Foerster
  • Part I. Germany, The United States and Total War: 1. Total war: the use and abuse of a concept Roger Chickering
  • 2. Different path to war: a comparative study of militarism and imperialism in the United States and Imperial Germany, 1871-1914 Irmgard Steinisch
  • Part II. War and Society: 3. The political economy of warfare in America, 1865-1914 Paul A. C. Kiostinen
  • 4. Hugo Stinnes and the prospect of war before 1914 Gerald D. Feldman
  • 5. War preparations and ethnic and racial relations in the United States Bruce White
  • 6. Religion and war in Imperial Germany Gangolf Hubinger
  • 7. Socializing American youth to be citizen-soldiers David I. MacLeod
  • 8. Preparing German youth for war Derek S. Linton
  • 9. Heroes and would-be heroes: veterans' and reservists' associations in Imperial Germany Thomas Rohkramer
  • 10. Mobilizing philanthropy in the service of war: the female rituals of care in the New Germany, 1871-1914 Jean H. Quataert
  • Part III. Memory and Anticipation: War and Culture: 11. The American debate over modern war, 1871-1914 John Whiteclay Chambers II
  • 12. Whose war? Whose nation? Tensions in the memory of the Franco-German War of 1870-1 Alfred Kelly
  • 13. War preparations and national identity in Imperial Germany Volker R. Berghahn
  • 14. Military imagination in the United States, 1815-1917 David F. Trask
  • 15. Dreams and nightmares: German military leadership and the images of future warfare, 1871-1914 Stig Foerster
  • 16. 'A calamity to civilization': Theodore Roosevelt and the danger of war in Europe Raimund Lammersdorf
  • Part IV. The Experience of War: 17. Total war on the American Indian Frontier Robert M. Utley
  • 18. 'The fellows can just starve': on wars of 'pacification' in the African colonies of Imperial Germany and the concept of 'total war' Trutz von Trotha
  • 19. Was the Philippine-American war a 'total war'? Glenn Anthony May
  • 20. An army on vacation? The German war in China, 1900-1 Sabine Dabringhaus
  • Index.

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