The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War.
Kennedy, Michael David
The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War. Hew Strachan.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2014, $45.00, hardcover, 416 pp.
This edition of the Oxford Illustrated History of the First World
War is the revised edition released in 2014 during the centennial of the
start of World War I. The previous edition was released in 1998, in time
for the 90th anniversary of the signing of the armistice in 1918. As
with the original edition, the editor is Sir Hew Strachan, a renowned
authority on this particular conflict. He is an Emeritus Fellow of All
Souls College, Oxford and a Life Fellow of Corpus Christi College,
Cambridge and currently serves as a Professor of International Relations
at the University of St. Andrews. In addition, he is an Imperial War
Museum trustee, a Commonwealth War Graves Commissioner, and serves on
the national advisory panels for the centenary of the First World War
for the United Kingdom and Scotland. He has authored numerous works on
World War I in particular and military history in general.
The book itself consists of twenty-four chapters written by separate
contributors. The chapters are arranged thematically and examine all
aspects of the war such as society, economics, geography, and culture.
Strachan himself provides the introduction as well as authoring Chapter
10, "Economic Mobilization: Money, Munitions, and Machines."
The other contributors to this edition include many of the world's
leading authorities on World War I including Dennis Showalter (Colorado
College), J.M. Winter (Yale University), Holger Herwig (University of
Calgary), John Morrow (University of Georgia), and David Trask (United
States Army Center of Military History).
According to Strachan, "there have been three high points over
the last hundred years" (Strachan 9) in regard to scholarship about
World War I. The first involved the wealth of personal memoirs in the
years following the war and including the release of the novel All Quiet
on the Western Front. The second high point surrounded the commemoration
of the war's fiftieth anniversary and involved mostly narrative
histories celebrating the nostalgia of the conflict. The final high
point is in conjunction with the centennial of the war (9-10). Strachan
describes the challenge for those celebrating the centennial to avoid
the "cliches of the fiftieth anniversary in order to shape a fresh
set of popular narratives" (10). This summation places this edition
of the book firmly in the midst of the final high point in World War I
literature.
Published seventeen years apart, key differences between the two
editions include an expanded introduction, new illustrations, and a
brand new chapter entitled, "No End to War." There are also
three new authors replacing the original contributors for chapters 2,
11, and 14. Sadly, the original authors passed away during the interim
between the two editions. In the first two chapters, the titles remained
the same, but Chapter 14 changed from "Women, War, and Work"
to "The Role of Women in the War." All three of the chapters
by new authors retained some of the original illustrations, but also
included new ones.
The sole new chapter was written by Robert Gerwarth of University
College Dublin and focuses on the continuation of violence following the
signing of the armistice. Gerwarth depicts how the peace treaty did not
end the fighting but resulted in political and social turmoil throughout
Europe. This turmoil was the result of the dissolution of the Habsburg,
Romanov, and Ottoman empires. "Their disappearance from the map
provided the space for the emergence of new and often nervously
aggressive national-states seeking to defend their real or imagined
borders through unrestrained force" (Gerwarth 304). In the
introduction, Strachan describes this chapter as "a reflection of
one of the directions which the study of the war has taken since
1998" (Strachan 9).
Chapter 11 entitled, "The Role of Women in the War"
deviates from the original version in that it explains the role of women
in the context of the war as opposed to the role of women in the war
effort. Historian Gail Braybon in the 1998 edition of the book focused
on the numerous jobs on the homefront in agriculture or industry where
women replaced men sent off to the front to fight. Historian Susan
Grayzel in the new edition explains the perception of women in the
context of World War I and also the role that geography played in their
participation as active participants or bystanders. She also spends time
discussing the impact that women had on the war effort. The result is a
better rounded chapter on the role of gender in World War I.
Chapter 2, "The Strategy of the Central Powers, 1914-1917"
remains basically the same in structure in both editions by providing an
overview of the military and diplomatic goals of the Central Powers
during the course of the war. Historian L.L. Farrar, Jr. in the original
edition emphasized military strategy at the start of the war, the shift
in strategy in 1916, and the leadership of influential Germans Paul von
Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff. Both chapters provide a detailed
explanation of the Schlieffen Plan, Germany's war plan going into
the war, which is critical to understating the early phase of the war.
The major difference with the new version by Holger Afflerbach of the
University of Leeds is a more in-depth description of the evolution of
strategy as evidenced by the different campaigns as the war
progressed.
Chapter 14, "Mutinies and Military Morale" was originally
written by David Englander and the updated version was completed by
Alexander Watson of Goldsmiths, University of London. Both the original
and the revised have similar structures addressing the basis for morale
and discipline and including statistics for corporeal punishment from
various countries during the war. The new chapter rounds out the theme
of morale with a discussion of the nature of unit cohesion and
organizational support as well as the concept of the citizen
soldier.
The "Illustrated" edition, which Oxford University Press
has become renowned for, includes twenty-four color plates and seven
maps. The color plates are located approximately in the center of the
book and are gorgeous in reproduction quality. Copious black and white
illustrations are also littered throughout the book to complement the
writing.
In addition to the index at the very back of the book, key terms are
listed in the margins throughout the text to guide the reader to
particular topics within the chapters. Interestingly, there are no
footnotes or endnotes to cite sources used by the authors. This absence
should not invite skepticism regarding the scholarly nature of the work
since a cursory review of the academic background of the authors quickly
establishes their credibility as experts. Instead, this deficiency could
slow down further study of the themes covered in the book. There is an
updated further reading section of the book that is organized by chapter
that provides sources for research into the topics covered by the
individual authors.
The strength of this type of book is the credibility of the
individual authors and their extensive knowledge of their given areas of
expertise. Unfortunately, there is somewhat of a lack of cohesion
between the different chapters as they were written individually and
without collaboration. Aside from the introduction by Strachan framing
the scope of the work and illustrating some of the material in the
ensuing chapters, there are no intermediate chapters to give
cohesiveness to the book. Further, there is no conclusion to provide a
summary of the previous chapters, but in its place a chapter entitled,
"Memory and the Great War" by Modris Eksteins of the
University of Toronto. This final chapter discusses the war as
remembered by the participants and society in subsequent years. The
biggest weakness of this title that I could identify is the fact that
there is no overarching thread to connect all of the chapters. As with
any work attempting to cover a topic as vast as World War I in only one
volume, this title unfortunately does omit certain topics and theaters
of the war. In particular, there is no mention of the war in Asia.
Nevertheless, this is still an excellent source for the study of World
War I. Due to its nature as a collaborative effort and the wide range of
themes that it covers, this title would serve well as a complementary
source to a general overview of the war such as Strachan's The
First World War. It could be challenging to a student or researcher who
did not already have a rudimentary knowledge of the conflict if they
were attempting to use it as an introductory text.
Reviewed by Michael David Kennedy, United States Air Force
Academy