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✦   LIBER   ✦

Ripples of Battle: How Wars of the Past Still Determine How We Fight, How We Live, and How We Think

✍ Scribed by Hanson, Victor Davis


Book ID
106863036
Publisher
Knopf
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
2 MB
Edition
1
Category
Standards
ISBN
1400095328

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The effects of war refuse to remain local: they persist through the centuries, sometimes in unlikely ways far removed from the military arena. In Ripples of Battle, the acclaimed historian Victor Davis Hanson weaves wide-ranging military and cultural history with his unparalleled gift for battle narrative as he illuminates the centrality of war in the human experience.
The Athenian defeat at Delium in 424 BC brought tactical innovations to infantry fighting; it also assured the influence of the philosophy of Socrates, who fought well in the battle. Nearly twenty-three hundred years later, the carnage at Shiloh and the death of the brilliant Southern strategist Albert Sidney Johnson inspired a sense of fateful tragedy that would endure and stymie Southern culture for decades. The Northern victory would also bolster the reputation of William Tecumseh Sherman, and inspire Lew Wallace to pen the classic Ben Hur. And, perhaps most resonant for our time, the agony of Okinawa spurred the Japanese toward state-sanctioned suicide missions, a tactic so uncompromising and subversive, it haunts our view of non-Western combatants to this day.

✦ Subjects


sci_history


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


cover
✍ Hanson, Victor Davis πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2004 πŸ› Random House, Inc. 🌐 English βš– 372 KB

### From Publishers Weekly With this usefully idiosyncratic and provocative work, Hanson may succeed the late Stephen Ambrose as America's laureate of military history. But where Ambrose's tone is ultimately elegiac, reflecting on the deeds and character of a past "greatest generation," Hanson's is

cover
✍ Hanson, Victor Davis πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2004 πŸ› Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group 🌐 English βš– 485 KB

### From Publishers Weekly With this usefully idiosyncratic and provocative work, Hanson may succeed the late Stephen Ambrose as America's laureate of military history. But where Ambrose's tone is ultimately elegiac, reflecting on the deeds and character of a past "greatest generation," Hanson's is