Onze boeken

Delen: Facebook Twitter

Reading Clausewitz

Door Beatrice Heuser

Reading Clausewitz
CategorieAlgemeen Militaria
Boeknummer#361875
TitelReading Clausewitz
AuteurHeuser, Beatrice
BoektypePaperback
UitgeverijLondon : Pimlico
Jaar van uitgave2002
ISBN10071266484X
ISBN139780712664844
TaalEngels
BeschrijvingPaperback, 8vo.
SamenvattingA comprehensive study of Clausewitz's "On War", first published in 1832 and regarded as a classic study of the nature and conditions of warfare. Heuser shows how to read Clausewitz as well as how others have read him - from the military commanders of World War I to strategists in the nuclear age. Clausewitz's On War, first published in 1832, remains the most famous study of the nature and conditions of warfare. Contemporaries found him 'endearing' or 'totally unpalatable', while later generations called him 'the father of modern strategical study', whose tenets have 'eternal relevance', or dismissed him as outdated. Was it really he who made the discovery that warfare is a continuation of politics? Was he the 'Mahdi of mass and mutual massacre', in part responsible for the mass slaughter of the First World War, as Liddell Hart contended? Can the idea of total war be traced back to him? Complex and often misunderstood, Clausewitz has fascinated and influenced generations of politicians and strategic thinkers. Beatrice Heuser's study is the first book, not only on how to read Clausewitz, but also on how others have read him - from the Prussian and German masters of warfare of the late nineteenth century through to the military commanders of the First World War, through Lenin and Mao Zedong to strategists in the nuclear age and of guerrilla warfare. The result is an accessible and comprehensive introduction to the work and influence of the greatest classic on the art of war.
Pagina's238
ConditieGoed
Prijs€ 10,00
ToevoegenToevoegen aan winkelwagen

Zie ook

Onze gebruikte boeken verkeren in goede tweedehands staat, tenzij hierboven anders beschreven. Kleine onvolkomenheden zijn niet altijd vermeld.