Archive for the ‘Essays of Interest’ Category

William Anthony Hay: Russia and World War I

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

Ambition in the East

Germany is the traditional villain in the story of World War I’s beginnings, but what if Russia played an even greater role?

By William Anthony Hay

From the Wall Street Journal Online

According to the conventional narrative, World War I began when a network of alliances drew ever-larger countries—in particular Germany,France and Britain—into a general conflict that spread from the Balkans after the assassination of Austria’s Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914. Germany bears responsibility for the war, in this view, because its leaders deliberately turned a regional clash between Austria-Hungary and Serbia into an existential struggle of rival alliances. Sean McMeekin challenges these assumptions with “The Russian Origins of the First World War,” proposing Russia as the driving force in the brinksmanship that led to the terrible slaughter of 1914-18.

The Bolshevik revolution of 1917 and the long shadow cast by the Soviet Union have tended to diminish attention to Russia’s role in the war. And writing Russian history from a Western perspective presents its own difficulties, from the notorious trouble of gaining access to Russian archives to the scarcity of Anglophone historians who know the language well enough to conduct worthwhile research. Writers, like many generals at the time, have tended to treat the Western Front as the war’s central focus, with everything else a sideshow.

Mr. McMeekin, who teaches international relations at Bilkent University in Turkey, proposes that the war’s real catalyst lay in Russia’s imperial ambition to supplant the waning Ottoman Empire in the Near East and to control the Turkish straits—the Bosphorus and Dardanelles—linking the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.

Although he fills a real gap by showing the view from St. Petersburg, Mr. McMeekin overstates his case. Russia certainly played a larger role than is generally credited in the July Crisis that followed the archduke’s assassination. But Russia did not primarily drive events, as he claims. Other parts of the story, especially the view from Berlin, are essential to showing the full picture.

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James Ceaser: An Ode to the Virtue of Gratitude

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

Is the virtue of gratitude diminishing in modern America, and if so, what are the sources or causes of its decline?

Peter Berkowitz: Boot Camp for Citizens

Friday, December 9th, 2011

America’s crisis of civic education is acute, requiring a change in the way students are taught about America and the rights and responsibilities of citizenship.

William Anthony Hay: Italy from a Historian’s Point of View

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

The problem lays not so much with the Italian economy as in the Italian state’s inability to get the public behind a reform program.

Two of America’s Leading Historians Discuss the State of Historical Study on Campus

Monday, November 21st, 2011

Gordon Wood and Jack Greene discuss the current study of history with Dr. Pamela Edwards.

Chicago: Ronna Burger Lecture

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Professor of Philosophy and Sizeler Professor of Jewish Philosophy, Tulane University, on “Maimonides on Knowledge of Good and Evil: The Guide of the Perplexed”

Avramenko: The Politics of Life and Limb

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

Courage is not simply one virtue among many; it is the primary means for humans to raise themselves out of their individualistic and isolated existence.

Jonathan White: Abraham Lincoln and Treason in the Civil War

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

Discover how the arrest and trial of John Merryman had a lasting impact on the Lincoln Administration and key issues of perennial constitutional theory.

Plato’s Political Philosophy: Harvard

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

Mark Blitz introduces Plato’s political philosophy through a reading of Plato’s Greater Hippias.

Lara Brown: UVA Toast 2011

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

It is a tradition during Jack Miller Center Summer Institutes for fellows to present original toasts after the evening meal.