Marktplatzangebote
4 Angebote ab € 24,60 €
  • Broschiertes Buch

The battles of the First World War created a fundamentally new impression of war. Total warfare, the use of propaganda, chemical weapons, and every possible other measure to ensure victory defined the event that should later be known as the "Great War", because it caused so many deaths and much suffering. The catastrophe also had an impact on the humanities, which inevitably had to deal with the processing of an event that seemed to be too big to be clearly understood by the human mind. The present volume covers several interdisciplinary perspectives by dealing with the impact of the war on…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The battles of the First World War created a fundamentally new impression of war. Total warfare, the use of propaganda, chemical weapons, and every possible other measure to ensure victory defined the event that should later be known as the "Great War", because it caused so many deaths and much suffering. The catastrophe also had an impact on the humanities, which inevitably had to deal with the processing of an event that seemed to be too big to be clearly understood by the human mind. The present volume covers several interdisciplinary perspectives by dealing with the impact of the war on the humanities during and after the conflict that deeply influenced the mindset of the 20th century.
Autorenporträt
Frank Jacob is Assistant Professor of World History at the City University of New York (QCC). Jeff Shaw is an Associate Professor of Strategy and Policy in the College of Distance Education at the US Naval War College. Timothy J. Demy is Professor of Military Ethics at U.S. Naval War College in Newport, R.I.