ID | 170291 |
Title Proper | Light of History |
Other Title Information | Scholarship and Officialdom in the Era of the First World War |
Language | ENG |
Author | Otte, T G |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This analysis examines the interplay between academia and officialdom during the First World War and its immediate aftermath. The role of more especially historians prior to and during the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 and the degree to which they succeeded—or failed—to affect decision making have been examined in some considerable detail by recent scholarship. Far less attention has been paid to the impact of individual historians’ experience of employment in war-time government agencies on their post-war scholarly pursuits. The effect of the war on historical scholarship, in fact, was profound. Not the least, it stimulated the establishment of diplomatic history as a distinct field of academic research and the emergence of the nascent discipline of international relations led by scholars who had served in wartime intelligence. |
`In' analytical Note | Diplomacy and Statecraft Vol. 30, No.2; Jun 2019: p.253-287 |
Journal Source | Diplomacy and Statecraft Vol: 30 No 2 |
Key Words | First World War |