War makes headlines and history books. It has shaped the international system, prompted social change, and inspired literature, art, and music. It engenders some of the most intense as well as the most brutal human experiences, and it raises fundamental questions of human ethics. The ubiquitous, contradictory, and many-sided character of war is fully reflected in this reader. It addresses a wide range of questions: What are the causes of war? Which strategic as well as moral principles guide its conduct, and how have these changed? Has total war become unthinkable? What is the nature of contemporary conflict? How is war experienced by those on the front line? These and other key issues are examined through a variety of writings. Drawing on sources from numerous countries and disciplines, this reader includes accounts by generals, soldiers, historians, strategists, and poets, who consider conflicts from the Napoleonic Wars to Vietnam and Bosnia. The writing not only of great strategic thinkers but also of ordinary soldiers illustrates both the theory and the experience of war in its many guises.
War
ISBN: 0192892541
ISBN 13: 9780192892546
Publication Date: May 26, 1994
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Pages: 385
Authors: Lawrence Freedman, B.H. Liddell Hart, Davidson Loehr, Pablo Carballo, Martin Middlebrook, Ed Cody, Michael Dockrill, Artyom Borovik, Vanessa Vasic janekovic, Efraim Karsh, Quincy Wright, Kenneth N. Waltz, Arturo Barea, Raymond Aron, Saul B. Cohen, Martin van Creveld, Ibn Khaldun, Martin Wright, Robert Gilpin, Vladimir Lenin, Seyom Brown, Michael W. Doyle, Christoper Dandeker, Henry Pownall, A. Giddens, M. Janowitz, A. Vagts, Philippe Manigart, Jean Elshtain, Charles C. Moskos, Brian Holden-Reid, John White, Edward Shils, Tom Harrisson, N. Kirzner Stewart, Barrie Paskins, Donald Macintyre, Erwin Rommel, Miles Tripp, Tatsuichiro Akizuki, Max Hastings