Cultures of Intelligence in the Era of the World Wars
Herausgeber: Ball, Simon; Neitzel, Sönke; Gestrich, Andreas; Gassert, Philipp
Cultures of Intelligence in the Era of the World Wars
Herausgeber: Ball, Simon; Neitzel, Sönke; Gestrich, Andreas; Gassert, Philipp
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Cultures of Intelligence analyses the intelligence services of Germany, Britain, the USA, and France in the first half of the twentieth century.
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Cultures of Intelligence analyses the intelligence services of Germany, Britain, the USA, and France in the first half of the twentieth century.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 223mm x 144mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9780198867203
- ISBN-10: 0198867204
- Artikelnr.: 60141000
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 223mm x 144mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9780198867203
- ISBN-10: 0198867204
- Artikelnr.: 60141000
Simon Ball is Professor of History at the University of Leeds Philipp Gassert is Professor of History at the University of Mannheim Andreas Gestrich is Professor of History at the University of Trier Sönke Neitzel is Professor of History at the University of Potsdam
* 1: Simon Ball and Andreas Gestrich: Cultures of Intelligence in the
Era of the World Wars: An Introduction
* 2: Sönke Neitzel: National Cultures of Military Intelligence?
Comparative Perspectives
* I: Political Culture and Cultures of Military Intelligence
* 3: Peter Jackson: Political Culture and Intelligence Culture: France
before the Great War
* 4: Alan MacLeod: Culture and the Development of British Intelligence
* 5: Mark Stout: The Men and Women of American Intelligence before the
CIA
* 6: Magnus Pahl: 'My strength is my mistrust': Hitler and his Military
Intelligence on the Eastern Front
* II: Security and Cultures of Intelligence
* 7: Jérôme aan de Wiel: Irish Police Intelligence, 1820s-1922
* 8: Markus Pöhlmann: The Evolution of the Military Intelligence System
in Germany, 1890-1918
* 9: Kaeten Mistry: Embarrassing Indiscretions: Embarrassing
Indiscretions: The Origins and Culture of US National Security
Whistleblowing in the Interwar Years
* III: The Public Sphere and Cultures of Intelligence
* 10: Deborah Bauer: Villains, Liars, Soldiers, and Patriots:
Perceptions of Espionage and the Politics of Emotion in
fin-de-siécle France
* 11: Simon Ball: Soldiers Cannot Write and Amateurs Do Not Understand:
History and the Formation of the Culture of Intelligence in Britain,
1917-1957
* 12: Michael Kranzdorf: Secrecy is the Essence of Successful Warfare.
Publicity is the Essence of Successful Journalism: Public Discourses
on Intelligence in Britain 1900-1927
* 13: Bernhard Sassmann: Talking Intelligence-the American Way: The
American Public and National Intelligence in the First Half of the
Twentieth Century
* 14: Simon Willmetts: Ways of Seeing War: Hollywood, the OSS, and the
Logistics of Perception
* IV: International Relations and Cultures of Intelligence
* 15: Huw Dylan: Culture, Adaptation, and Change in British
Intelligence in the Transition from World War to Cold War
* 16: Shlomo Shpiro: Intelligence Without a Homeland: Jewish Cultural
and Political Approaches to Intelligence, 1897-1948
* 17: Martin Thomas: The Imperial Cultures of French Security
Intelligence from World War to Decolonization War Culture
* 18: Philipp Gassert: Shifting Contexts: The American Turn Towards
Internationalism and Globalism and the Rise of the US Intelligence
System
Era of the World Wars: An Introduction
* 2: Sönke Neitzel: National Cultures of Military Intelligence?
Comparative Perspectives
* I: Political Culture and Cultures of Military Intelligence
* 3: Peter Jackson: Political Culture and Intelligence Culture: France
before the Great War
* 4: Alan MacLeod: Culture and the Development of British Intelligence
* 5: Mark Stout: The Men and Women of American Intelligence before the
CIA
* 6: Magnus Pahl: 'My strength is my mistrust': Hitler and his Military
Intelligence on the Eastern Front
* II: Security and Cultures of Intelligence
* 7: Jérôme aan de Wiel: Irish Police Intelligence, 1820s-1922
* 8: Markus Pöhlmann: The Evolution of the Military Intelligence System
in Germany, 1890-1918
* 9: Kaeten Mistry: Embarrassing Indiscretions: Embarrassing
Indiscretions: The Origins and Culture of US National Security
Whistleblowing in the Interwar Years
* III: The Public Sphere and Cultures of Intelligence
* 10: Deborah Bauer: Villains, Liars, Soldiers, and Patriots:
Perceptions of Espionage and the Politics of Emotion in
fin-de-siécle France
* 11: Simon Ball: Soldiers Cannot Write and Amateurs Do Not Understand:
History and the Formation of the Culture of Intelligence in Britain,
1917-1957
* 12: Michael Kranzdorf: Secrecy is the Essence of Successful Warfare.
Publicity is the Essence of Successful Journalism: Public Discourses
on Intelligence in Britain 1900-1927
* 13: Bernhard Sassmann: Talking Intelligence-the American Way: The
American Public and National Intelligence in the First Half of the
Twentieth Century
* 14: Simon Willmetts: Ways of Seeing War: Hollywood, the OSS, and the
Logistics of Perception
* IV: International Relations and Cultures of Intelligence
* 15: Huw Dylan: Culture, Adaptation, and Change in British
Intelligence in the Transition from World War to Cold War
* 16: Shlomo Shpiro: Intelligence Without a Homeland: Jewish Cultural
and Political Approaches to Intelligence, 1897-1948
* 17: Martin Thomas: The Imperial Cultures of French Security
Intelligence from World War to Decolonization War Culture
* 18: Philipp Gassert: Shifting Contexts: The American Turn Towards
Internationalism and Globalism and the Rise of the US Intelligence
System
* 1: Simon Ball and Andreas Gestrich: Cultures of Intelligence in the
Era of the World Wars: An Introduction
* 2: Sönke Neitzel: National Cultures of Military Intelligence?
Comparative Perspectives
* I: Political Culture and Cultures of Military Intelligence
* 3: Peter Jackson: Political Culture and Intelligence Culture: France
before the Great War
* 4: Alan MacLeod: Culture and the Development of British Intelligence
* 5: Mark Stout: The Men and Women of American Intelligence before the
CIA
* 6: Magnus Pahl: 'My strength is my mistrust': Hitler and his Military
Intelligence on the Eastern Front
* II: Security and Cultures of Intelligence
* 7: Jérôme aan de Wiel: Irish Police Intelligence, 1820s-1922
* 8: Markus Pöhlmann: The Evolution of the Military Intelligence System
in Germany, 1890-1918
* 9: Kaeten Mistry: Embarrassing Indiscretions: Embarrassing
Indiscretions: The Origins and Culture of US National Security
Whistleblowing in the Interwar Years
* III: The Public Sphere and Cultures of Intelligence
* 10: Deborah Bauer: Villains, Liars, Soldiers, and Patriots:
Perceptions of Espionage and the Politics of Emotion in
fin-de-siécle France
* 11: Simon Ball: Soldiers Cannot Write and Amateurs Do Not Understand:
History and the Formation of the Culture of Intelligence in Britain,
1917-1957
* 12: Michael Kranzdorf: Secrecy is the Essence of Successful Warfare.
Publicity is the Essence of Successful Journalism: Public Discourses
on Intelligence in Britain 1900-1927
* 13: Bernhard Sassmann: Talking Intelligence-the American Way: The
American Public and National Intelligence in the First Half of the
Twentieth Century
* 14: Simon Willmetts: Ways of Seeing War: Hollywood, the OSS, and the
Logistics of Perception
* IV: International Relations and Cultures of Intelligence
* 15: Huw Dylan: Culture, Adaptation, and Change in British
Intelligence in the Transition from World War to Cold War
* 16: Shlomo Shpiro: Intelligence Without a Homeland: Jewish Cultural
and Political Approaches to Intelligence, 1897-1948
* 17: Martin Thomas: The Imperial Cultures of French Security
Intelligence from World War to Decolonization War Culture
* 18: Philipp Gassert: Shifting Contexts: The American Turn Towards
Internationalism and Globalism and the Rise of the US Intelligence
System
Era of the World Wars: An Introduction
* 2: Sönke Neitzel: National Cultures of Military Intelligence?
Comparative Perspectives
* I: Political Culture and Cultures of Military Intelligence
* 3: Peter Jackson: Political Culture and Intelligence Culture: France
before the Great War
* 4: Alan MacLeod: Culture and the Development of British Intelligence
* 5: Mark Stout: The Men and Women of American Intelligence before the
CIA
* 6: Magnus Pahl: 'My strength is my mistrust': Hitler and his Military
Intelligence on the Eastern Front
* II: Security and Cultures of Intelligence
* 7: Jérôme aan de Wiel: Irish Police Intelligence, 1820s-1922
* 8: Markus Pöhlmann: The Evolution of the Military Intelligence System
in Germany, 1890-1918
* 9: Kaeten Mistry: Embarrassing Indiscretions: Embarrassing
Indiscretions: The Origins and Culture of US National Security
Whistleblowing in the Interwar Years
* III: The Public Sphere and Cultures of Intelligence
* 10: Deborah Bauer: Villains, Liars, Soldiers, and Patriots:
Perceptions of Espionage and the Politics of Emotion in
fin-de-siécle France
* 11: Simon Ball: Soldiers Cannot Write and Amateurs Do Not Understand:
History and the Formation of the Culture of Intelligence in Britain,
1917-1957
* 12: Michael Kranzdorf: Secrecy is the Essence of Successful Warfare.
Publicity is the Essence of Successful Journalism: Public Discourses
on Intelligence in Britain 1900-1927
* 13: Bernhard Sassmann: Talking Intelligence-the American Way: The
American Public and National Intelligence in the First Half of the
Twentieth Century
* 14: Simon Willmetts: Ways of Seeing War: Hollywood, the OSS, and the
Logistics of Perception
* IV: International Relations and Cultures of Intelligence
* 15: Huw Dylan: Culture, Adaptation, and Change in British
Intelligence in the Transition from World War to Cold War
* 16: Shlomo Shpiro: Intelligence Without a Homeland: Jewish Cultural
and Political Approaches to Intelligence, 1897-1948
* 17: Martin Thomas: The Imperial Cultures of French Security
Intelligence from World War to Decolonization War Culture
* 18: Philipp Gassert: Shifting Contexts: The American Turn Towards
Internationalism and Globalism and the Rise of the US Intelligence
System