This book will interest historians of the Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles, 1919. It reconsiders them against Keynes' verdict in The Economic Consequences of the Peace 'the Carthaginian peace of Monsieur Clemenceau'. This powerful myth influenced the generation between the wars and later. The Introduction attributes Keynes' lasting appeal chiefly to his literary brilliance and mordant portraits of Lloyd George, Clemenceau and Woodrow Wilson.Part 1 ('Peacemaking') draws on a range of sources to retrace the personalities, problems, pressures and progress of the Conference as a disorganised, long drawn-out, hard-won struggle. The result a set of inter-Allied compromises imposed on Germany for lack of room to manoeuvre. Part 2 ('Mythmaking') highlights the mythology of Germany's 'destruction' by a treaty imposed without face-to-face discussion perceived by a society in shock, baulked of victory, in denial about defeat, enraged by the 'war-guilt clause' and unreconciled to the 'Diktat' of Versailles.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 148 x 212mm
Publication Date: 01 Dec 2024
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781036414634
About Antony Lentin
Formerly a Professor of History and Law Tutor at the Open University Antony Lentin is a Senior Member of Wolfson College Cambridge UK and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. His books on the Paris Peace Conference include Guilt at Versailles: Lloyd George and the Pre-History of Appeasement (1985) Lloyd George and the Lost Peace (2001) and General Smuts (2010). A Barrister and author of Banker Traitor Scapegoat Spy? The Troublesome Case of Sir Edgar Speyer (2013) he has published two judicial biographies with Cambridge Scholars Publishing: The Last Political Law Lord: Lord Sumner (1869-1934) (2009) and Mr Justice McCardie (1869-1933): Rebel Reformer and Rogue Judge (2016). He has published widely on eighteenth-century Russia and edited The Odes of Horace for Wordsworth Classics.