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Review essay

Re-fighting the First World War: Internationalism, strategy, and law

Pages 1015-1026 | Published online: 27 Sep 2019
 

Notes

1 H. Strachan, The Origins of the First World War’, International Affairs 90/2 (2014), 429–39.

2 H. Jones, ‘As the Centenary Approaches: The Regeneration of First World War Historiography’, The Historical Journal 56/3 (2013), 857–78.

3 I.V. Hull, A Scrap of Paper: Breaking and Making International Law during the Great War (Ithaca: Cornell University Press 2014).

4 Key works include H. Afflerbach and D. Stevenson (eds.), An Improbable War? The Outbreak of World War I and European Political Culture before 1914 (Oxford: Berghan 2007); T.G. Otte, July Crisis: The World’s Descent into War, Summer 1914 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014).

5 D. Lloyd George, War Memoirs of David Lloyd George, Vol. I (London: Odhams Press 1938 edn), 38–40.

6 M. Ceadel, Pacifism in Britain, 1914–1945: Defining of a Faith (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1980); C. Pennell, A Kingdom United: Popular Responses to the Outbreak of the First World War in Britain and Ireland (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2012); M. Neiberg, Dance of the Furies: Europe and the Outbreak of World War I (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2014).

7 S. Keefer, ‘“Explosive Missals”: International Law, Technology, and Security in Nineteenth Century Disarmament Conferences’, War in History 21/4 (2014), 445–64.

8 The key argument in this respect being Hull, A Scrap of Paper and also her Absolute Destruction: Military Culture and the Practices of War in Imperial Germany (Ithaca: Cornell University Press 2005).

9 Nicholas Lambert, Planning Armageddon: British Economic Warfare and the First World War (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 2012).

10 I.V. Hull, ‘“Military Necessity” and the Laws of War in Imperial Germany’, in S. Kalyvas, I. Shapiro, and T. Masoud (eds.), Order, Conflict and Violence (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2008), 352–77.

11 For an important recent intervention on this topic see J. Goldrick, After Jutland: The Naval War in North European Waters, June 1916-November 1918 (Annapolis, MA: UNSI Press 2018).

12 Hull, Scrap of Paper, 141–210.

13 See, for instance, J. Pitts, ‘Boundaries of Victorian International Law’, in D. Bell, (ed.), Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2007), 67–88.

14 The most notable contributions being E. Greenhalgh, Victory through Coalition: Britain and France during the First World War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2005) and Foch in Command: The Forging of a First World War General (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2011).

15 Quoted in Greenhalgh, Victory Through Coalition, 6.

16 Quoted in B. Liddell Hart, Foch: The Man of Orléans (Boston: Little, Brown, & Co 1932), 454.

17 J. Horne, ‘End of a Paradigm? The Cultural History of the Great War’, Past & Present 242/1 (2019), 155–92.

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