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- The Father of Us All
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Description
Victor Davis Hanson has long been acclaimed as one of our leading scholars of ancient history. In recent years he has also become a trenchant voice on current affairs, bringing a historian's deep knowledge of past conflicts to bear on the crises of the present, from 9/11 to Iran. "War," he writes, "is an entirely human enterprise." Ideologies change, technologies develop, new strategies are invented-but human nature is constant across time and space. The dynamics of warfare in the present age still remain comprehensible to us through careful study of the past. Though many have called the War on Terror unprecedented, its contours would have been quite familiar to Themistocles of Athens or William Tecumseh Sherman. And as we face the menace of a bin Laden or a Kim Jong-Il, we can prepare ourselves with knowledge of how such challenges have been met before.
The Father of Us All brings together much of Hanson's finest writing on war and society, both ancient and modern. The author has gathered a range of essays, and combined and revised them into a richly textured new work that explores such topics as how technology shapes warfare, what constitutes the "American way of war," and why even those who abhor war need to study military history. "War is the father and king of us all," Heraclitus wrote in ancient Greece. And as Victor Davis Hanson shows, it is no less so today.
Product details
| Published | 21 Nov 2013 |
|---|---|
| Format | Paperback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 272 |
| ISBN | 9781608194100 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Press |
| Dimensions | 210 x 140 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Enthralling ... One closes this book wishing that its final verdict was as well known as more familiar tenets of Greek wisdom.
Christopher Hitchens on The Western Way of War
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Vivid . . . ambitious . . . Challenges readers to broaden their horizons and examine their assumptions. . . . [Hanson] more than makes his case.
NYTBR on Carnage and Culture
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Hanson performs the difficult feat of not talking down to readers while still presuming no prior knowledge of the war.
Washington Post on A War Like No Other
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Awarded National Humanities Medal in 2007.

























