University of Toronto Press
Beyond the Great War
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Edited by:
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About this book
This collection addresses the impact of the end of the First World War and challenges the positive vision of a new world order that emerged from the Paris Peace Conference of 1919.
Author / Editor information
Carl Bouchard is a professor of Modern History and International Relations at the Université de Montréal.
Ingram Norman :
Norman Ingram is a professor of Modern French History at Concordia University.
Reviews
“What Beyond the Great War demonstrates is how that complexity was reflected in divergent proposals for the creation of a better world. Pacifist and nonpacifist mothers in France held widely differing opinions about how to achieve peace, socialists were equally divided, and the Ligue des droits de l’homme, an institution central to French republicanism, could not agree whether the Treaty of Versailles should be revised. With chapters ranging from the ambiguous nature of Alsace-Lorraine’s return to France to Mary Church Terrell’s struggles to advance racial and gender equality, the book represents a worthy attempt to broaden understanding of the legacy of the conflict.”
Jan Stöckmann:
“Beyond the Great War rectifies the history of the end of the war by going beyond traditional actors and periodisations, and by emphasising the struggles and imperfections in what is known as the new international order.”
Eckart Conze, Professor of Modern History, University of Marburg:
"Ending war and creating peace: This book offers new perspectives on the end of the First World War and the attempts to build a new world order. One hundred years after the Paris Peace Treaties, its contributions challenge established interpretations and provide important and stimulating fresh views."
Robert Gerwarth, Professor of Modern History and Director of the Centre for War Studies, University College Dublin:
"Beyond the Great War is a brilliant collection of essays written by some of the leading historians of our time. This book is essential reading for anyone who wishes to understand the origins of the Paris Peace Treaties and the contested international order that emerged in 1919."
Laurence Badel, Professor in History of International Relations, Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University :
"Combining original case studies and conceptual reflections as well as social and institutional approaches, the book attests to the vitality of the history of international relations and its attractiveness to new generations of researchers. Giving an important place to the situation of France at the time of the debates on international reconstruction, Beyond the Great War also enhances the historiography of the transatlantic relationship."
Erez Manela, Professor of History, Harvard University, and author of The Wilsonian Moment:
"What sort of new world order – or disorder – did the Great War make? With a stellar group of scholars weighing in on this question from fresh, diverse perspectives, this volume will enlighten anyone interested in the post-1919 world."
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
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1 1914 or 1919? The Aetiology of a Disordered World
1 - Internationalism and Political Disorder
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2 The Great War and the Political Conditions of Internationalism
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3 Setting Out on a Long Irenic Campaign: The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Prepares the Construction of a Peaceful World Order, 1910–1920
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4 Three Visions of Internationalism: European Socialists after the First World War
67 - Between Order and Disorder: The Case of France
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5 Historical Dissent and the Contested Peace of 1919 in France
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6 Not So Republican after All? The Ambiguous End of the Great War in Alsace-Lorraine, 1918–1919
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7 The “Right to Reparations,” a Legal Concept in Post-war France
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8 The Wilsonians: When the Traditional Order Creates Disorder (1918–1919)
148 - Science, Gender, and Race in a Disordered Post-war World
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9 “Building for Peace”: American Chemist William Noyes behind Reconciliation Efforts (1919–1924)
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10 So That Our Sons Have Not Died in Vain: Calls for Peace from Pacifist and Non-pacifist Mothers after the Great War
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11 “No Women of the World Hate War and Seek Peace More Than the Colored Women”: Mary Church Terrell’s Bid for Racial Justice and Women’s Rights in 1919
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Contributors
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Index
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