The scaremongers : the advocacy of war and rearmament 1896-1914

Bibliographic Information

The scaremongers : the advocacy of war and rearmament 1896-1914

A.J.A. Morris

(Routledge library editions, . The First World War ; 10)

Routledge, 2014, c1984

  • : set

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Reprint. Originally published: London : Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: set ISBN 9780415749244

Description

Re-issuing 15 volumes originally published between 1967 and 1989, the books in this collection cover everything from pre-war diplomacy and international relations, British and German military and naval strategy and capability to food supply and the effect of the First World War on British politics and government.

Table of Contents

1. British Food Policy in the First World War 2. Britain, America and the sinews of war, 1914-1918. 3. War and the state : the transformation of British government 1914-1919 4. German policy toward neutral Spain, 1914-1918 5. British agriculture in the First World War 6. British strategy and war aims, 1914-16 7. Luxury' fleet : the Imperial German Navy 1888-1918 8. War aims and strategic policy in the Great War, 1914-1918 9. The war plans of the great powers, 1880-1914 10. The scaremongers : the advocacy of war and rearmament 1896-1914 11. American newsfilm 1914-1919 : the underexposed war 12. Strategy and Supply 13. Britain and the First World War 14. Socialism and the challenge of war. Ideas and politics in Britain, 1912-18. 15. Great Britain and the war of 1914-1918.
Volume

ISBN 9781138018082

Description

This revealing book illustrates how the passion for war was fostered and promoted. The author provides detailed evidence of how and why an image of Germany as a nation determined upon world hegemony was deliberately promoted by a group of British newspaper editors, proprietors and journalists. This book examines the role of these 'scaremongers'. Were they as influential as their critics claimed? Did they influence the minds of their readers and shape events? Were they guilty of creating a climate of opinion that ensured that their prophecies of inevitable Anglo-German war became fact in 1914?

Table of Contents

Prologue. Part 1: Making Friends and Choosing Enemies: The Diplomats 1. The Kaiser Sends a Telegram and Chirol is Aggrieved 2. The New Tenant at 66 Dorotheenstrasse 3. Leo maxse's ABC of Better Relations with Russia 4. To League with the Shameless Hun 5. New Friends and Old Enemies 6. Einkreisungspolitik - Encirlclement Part 2: Alarums and Excursions: the Admirals and the Generals 7. Dies irae, dies illa 8. Is the Kaiser Coming for Tea? 9. Enter 'the gorgeous Wrickington' 10. A Discordant Band of Brothers 11. The Committee of Imperial Defence Investigates 12. Of Secrets, Spies and Saboteurs 13. Hysteria Navalis 14. The Sinking of Admiral Fisher Part 3: For National Security and Party Advantage: The Politicians 15. Naval Scaremongering: Garvin's Election Cannon-Ball 16. Conscription, or How to Lose Friends and Votes Part 4: 'And he gathered them in a place called ...Armageddon' 17. Collapse of the Triple Entente 18. A Domestic Interlude: Lord Northcliffe Asserts Himself 19. 1911: Annus Mirabilis 20. Priming the magazine 21. Military matters: Repington Fights Real and Imagined Foes 22. Over the Brink Epilogue.

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