<p>
<em>“…an enlightening addition to our ever-growing library of reflexions on Clausewitz’s legacy.”</em> <strong>· The Journal of Military History</strong></p>
<p>
<em>“Overall the essays published here reflect impressively the intensive occupation of the by now 91-years-old historian in the life and work of Carl von Clausewitz. Apart from the research carried out of the German historian Werner Hahlweg and the French sociologist Raymond Aron, it is Peter Paret’s work that has greatly enriched our knowledge of Clausewitz and his time.”</em> <strong>· Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift</strong></p>
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<em>“Peter Paret has given us yet another fine addition to the literature on Clausewitz, as well as his era.”</em> <strong>· Journal of Modern History</strong></p>
Anything but a detached theorist, Clausewitz was as fully engaged in the intellectual and cultural currents of his time as in its political and military conflicts. Late-eighteenth century thought helped shape the analytic methods he developed for the study of war. The essays in this volume follow his career in a complex military society, together with that of other students of war, both friends and rivals, providing a broad perspective that leads to significant documents so far unknown or ignored. They add to our understanding of Clausewitz’s early ideas and their expansion into a comprehensive theory that continues to challenge our thinking about war today.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
- Text and Context: Two Ways to Clausewitz
- A Learned Officer among Others
- Frederick the Great and his Interpreters Clausewitz and Schlieffen – Three Phases in the History of Strategy
- From Ideal to Ambiguity: Johannes von Müller, Clausewitz, and the People in Arms
- Half against my Will I have become a Professor”
- Two Historians on Defeat and Its Causes
Bibliography
Index