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AFRIKANERS - HISTORY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   125192


British way of war: cultural assumptions and practice in the south African war, 1899-1902 / Miller, Stephen M   Journal Article
Miller, Stephen M Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This essay explores the impact of late Victorian cultural assumptions on the conduct of the South African War of 1899-1902, both at home and on the battlefield. It contends that three cultural values, intrinsic to late Victorian culture--cosmopolitanism, political egalitarianism, and race--shaped British soldiers' sense of justice at the outset of the war and, as a result, influenced their actions on and off the battlefield. This article emphasizes that the numerous "small wars" fought by British armies in the late nineteenth century, of which the South African War was the largest, were each unique and worthy of study not just as political history but as cultural military history
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2
ID:   125191


Methods of barbarism or western tradition: Britain, South Africa and the evolution of escalatory violence as policy / Vergolina, Joseph R   Journal Article
Vergolina, Joseph R Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The historical significance of the Second Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902) has traditionally suffered from the conflict's chronological proximity to the Great War. Compared to the industrial slaughter of 1914-1918, the military extremism employed in the South African conflict has gone largely unanalyzed. A close examination of British military policies during the Second Boer War shows that the resort to escalatory violence sprang from frustration at the elusiveness of decisive battle, deemed vital to shore up Britain's position as the world's sole superpower, and was sanctioned by a Western tradition of unrestricted violence towards peoples like the Boers who pursued unconventional battlefield strategies.
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