Men at War

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8th Division
A01=Christon Archer
Air Staff
Anti-aircraft Guns
ars
Author_Christon Archer
Bomber Command
Brereton Greenhous
Canadian Expeditionary Force
Category=JW
Category=NHB
Christon Archer
civilian military relations
Close Air Support
David Stafford
Desmond Morton
Dive Bombers
dla
Dominick Graham
edu
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Frank Eyck
JIC
Joseph J. Ellis
Kenneth Taylor
Laser Guided Bomb
Marian C. McKenna
Martin Kitchen
military historiography approaches
military history methodology
pop
Post War
psychological operations research
Public Warning System
PWE
RAF
Reginald H. Roy
royal
Royal Air Force
scot
scots
Secret Intelligence Service
Secretary Of State
Senior Canadian Officers
Sis
SOE Activity
SOE Operation
sol
State Secretary
strategic bombing development
Superb
Sydney Wise
Timothy Travers
twentieth century conflicts
Unrestricted Submarine Warfare
wa'r
warfare technological innovation
Western Front
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780913750216
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 1982
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The growing number of books on military history and the lively interest in military history courses at colleges and universities show that the study of war is enjoying considerable popularity. The reasons for this are arguable, but of immediate interest is the kind of military history that is taught and written. Here the student of war comes across an interesting division of opinion as to how military history should be written. Military history, lying as it does on the frontier between history and military science, requires knowledge of both fields. This fact often presents a difficulty to the history teacher.

Generally speaking, history is a discipline by virtue of its subject matter, not by virtue of a particular methodology such as is characteristic of the sciences and of some social sciences. The perspective of Men at War is a cross between a professional internalist approach and a civilian contextual view. This separation is not unique to military history, for the same dualism tends to occur in those areas of history, such as law and medicine, that can be written both by members of the profession concerned—lawyers and doctors—and by those outside the profession.

The problem is that at one extreme the contextual view can take the emotional content out of war, while at the other extreme the internalist view can put too much in. Men at War seeks to locate a military history that combines the professional, internalist method and the civilian, contextual method by showing that these are two fundamental sources from which a war derives. Seen in this way, this volume breaks new ground in defining the sources of twentieth-century power.

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