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The Cambridge History of the Second World War 3 Volume Hardback Set

The Cambridge History of the Second World War 3 Volume Hardback Set

The Cambridge History of the Second World War 3 Volume Hardback Set

Evan Mawdsley, University of Glasgow
John Ferris, University of Calgary
Richard Bosworth, Jesus College, Oxford
Joseph Maiolo, King's College London
Michael Geyer, University of Chicago
Adam Tooze, Yale University, Connecticut
July 2015
Multiple copy pack
9781107101777
Replaced by:

9781108407809

    The Cambridge History of the Second World War is an authoritative new account of the conflict that unfolded between 1939 and 1945. With contributions from a team of leading historians, the three volumes adopt a transnational approach to offer a comprehensive, global analysis of the military, political, sociological, economic and cultural aspects of the war. Volume 1 provides an operational perspective on the course of the war, examining strategies, military cultures and organisation and the key campaigns, whilst Volume 2 reviews the 'politics' of war, the global aspirations of the rival alliances, and the role of diplomacy. Volume 3 considers the war as an economic, social and cultural event, exploring how entire nations mobilised their economies and populations and dealt with the catastrophic losses that followed. The volumes conclude by considering the lasting impact of World War Two and the memory of war across different cultures of commemoration.

    • The first global account providing the history of the Second World War
    • Written by a team of leading international contributors to provide the most authoritative account of the conflict to date
    • Integrates the Second World War's military, political, social and cultural history

    Awards

    Honourable Mention, 2016 PROSE Award for Multivolume Reference in the Humanities and Social Sciences

    Read more

    Product details

    July 2015
    Multiple copy pack
    9781107101777
    2025 pages
    242 × 172 × 137 mm
    4.38kg
    96 colour illus. 36 maps
    Replaced by 9781108407809

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Grand Strategies
    • Part I John Ferris and Evan Mawdsley
    • 1. British military strategy David French
    • 2. China's long war with Japan Jay Taylor
    • 3. French grand strategy and defence preparations Martin S. Alexander
    • 4. German strategy, 1939–45 Gerhard Weinberg
    • 5. Mussolini's strategy 1939–43 John Gooch
    • 6. Feigning grand strategy
    • Part II. Campaigns
    • Part II John Ferris and Evan Mawdsley
    • 9. Campaigns in China, 1937–45 Hans Van De Ven
    • 10. War in the West, 1939–40
    • Part III. Fighting Forces
    • Part III John Ferris and Evan Mawdsley
    • 18. War planning Eliot Cohen
    • 19. Armies, navies, air forces
    • Part I. Ideologies
    • Part I Richard J. B. Bosworth and Joseph A. Maiolo
    • 1. The axis
    • Part II. Diplomacy and Alliances
    • Part II Richard J. B. Bosworth and Joseph A. Maiolo
    • 9. Europe
    • Part III. Occupation, Collaboration, Resistance and Liberation
    • Part III Richard J. B. Bosworth and Joseph A. Maiolo
    • 15. Wartime occupation by Germany
    • Part I. Political Economy
    • Part I Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze
    • 1. The economics of the war with Germany Adam Tooze and Jamie Martin
    • 2. Finance for war in Asia and its aftermath Greg Huff
    • 3. War of the factories Jeff Fear
    • 4. Controlling resources
    • Part II. The Social Practice of Total War, 1939–45
    • Part II Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze
    • 8. Death and survival in the Second World War Richard Bessel
    • 9. Battles for morale
    • Part III. The Moral Economy of War
    • Part III Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze
    • 14. Just and unjust wars.
      Contributors
    • Evan Mawdsley, John Ferris, David French, Jay Taylor, Martin S. Alexander, Gerhard Weinberg, John Gooch, Alessio Patalono, Thomas Mahnken, Bruce W. Menning, Jonathan House, Hans Van De Ven, Karl-Heinz Frieser, David R. Stone, Simon Ball, Mary Kathryn Barbier, John T. Kuehn, Marc Milner, Tami Davis Biddle, Eliot Cohen, Dennis Showalter, Sanders Marble, Phillips O'Brien, Bob Moore, Ben H. Shepherd, Richard J. B. Bosworth, Joseph A. Maiolo, Robert Gerwarth, Talbot Imlay, Silvio Pons, Jo Fox, Steven Casey, Patricia Clavin, Jürgen Matthäus, Donald Bloxham, Jonathan Waterlow, Peter Jackson, Peter Mauch, Norman J. W. Goda, David Reynolds, Paul Preston, Klas Ã…mark, Nicholas Stargardt, William I. Hitchcock, Davide Rodogno, Gregor Kranjc, Mark Edele, Margherita Zanasi, Paul H. Kratoska, Ken'ichi Goto, Ashley Jackson, Martin Thomas, David Motodel, Michael Geyer, Adam Tooze, Jamie Martin, Greg Huff, Jeff Fear, David Edgerton, Lizzie Collingham, Cathryn Carson, Michael Miller, Richard Bessel, Jochen Hellbeck, Rüdiger Hachtman, Geoffrey Cocks, Christopher Pearson, Yasmin Khan, Sabine Frühstück, Jeremy Kessler, Devin Pendas, Stephen Porter, David Engerman, Timothy B. Smith, Rana Mitter, Mark Bradley, Peter Gordon, Monica Black, Lucy Noakes, Jie-Hyun Lim, Dorothee Brantz

    • General Editor
    • Evan Mawdsley , University of Glasgow

      Evan Mawdsley is an international historian who has written extensively on the Second World War. Educated at Haverford College, the University of Chicago, and the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, his work for many years dealt with twentieth-century Russian history, where he wrote and taught on the revolution, the civil war, the Stalin period and the nature of the Soviet-era political elite. His Russian Civil War, originally published in 1987, remains in print as a standard work on the subject. In the past fifteen years his research and writing have concentrated on the Second World War. Thunder in the East: The Nazi-Soviet War, 1941–1945 was published in 2005. After completing that book he moved in two quite different directions, producing a broad-brush treatment of the whole global conflict in the form of World War II: A New History (2009), and zooming in to examine a critical two weeks of the conflict with December 1941: Twelve Days that Began a World War (2011). He is currently writing an overall naval history of the war, as well as preparing a second edition of Thunder in the East. He was Professor of International History at the University of Glasgow and since 2010 has been an Honorary Professorial Research Fellow there.

    • Editors
    • John Ferris , University of Calgary

      John Ferris is Professor of History and Fellow at The Centre for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary. He received an M.A. (1980) and a Ph.D. (1986) in War Studies from King's College London. He has published four books and one hundred academic articles or chapters in books, on diplomatic, intelligence and military history, as well as contemporary strategy and intelligence. His books have been published in Australia, Canada, France, Japan, Singapore, Turkey, the United States and the United Kingdom: they have been translated into French and Japanese. He comments in national and international media, on Canadian and American foreign and military policy. He has been Cryptologic Historical Scholar in Residence at The National Security Agency and Killam Residential Professor at the University of Calgary, and is Honorary Professor at the Department of International Politics, the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, and Adjunct Professor at the Department of War Studies, Royal Military College of Canada. He has just completed a book on the theory of intelligence and is working on a study of Britain, Japan, the United States, intelligence, deception and strategy, and the outbreak of the Pacific War.

    • Richard Bosworth , Jesus College, Oxford

      Richard Bosworth is Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College, Oxford.

    • Joseph Maiolo , King's College London

      Joseph Maiolo is Professor of International History in the Department of War Studies at King's College London.

    • Michael Geyer , University of Chicago

      Michael Geyer is Samuel N. Harper Professor of German and European History in the Department of History at the University of Chicago. His recent publications include the edited volume Beyond Totalitarianism: Stalinism and Nazism Compared (Cambridge, 2009).

    • Adam Tooze , Yale University, Connecticut

      Adam Tooze is Professor of Modern German History at Yale University, Connecticut. His published works includes Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy (2007), and The Deluge: The Great War and the Remaking of Global Order, 1916–1931 (2015).