Journal of Military History
Article Abstracts
Vol. 70, No. 4
October 2006
Articles:
Ciro Paoletti, "Prince Eugene of Savoy, the Toulon Expedition
of 1707, and the English Historians-A Dissenting View," The
Journal of Military History 70 (October 2006): 939-962.
- This article uses recent English-language historical accounts
of the 1707 siege of the French naval base of Toulon by the army
of Prince Eugene of Savoy as a case study of the distortions
that can occur when the authors of these accounts have not made
full use of works written at the time of the events they treat
and, in particular, are ignorant of the historical literature
on the subject in languages other than their own (in this case,
works in French, German, and Italian). The author believes that
these shortcomings in the English-language literature on the
military history of the 1688-1748 period, which currently dominates
the field, demonstrate how much work remains to be done on every
aspect of this crucial period, addressing once again problems
that everyone believed had been closed for good.
-
Mark C. Hunter, "The U.S. Naval Academy and Its Summer
Cruises: Professionalization in the Antebellum U.S. Navy, 1845-1861,"
The Journal of Military History 70 (October 2006): 963-994.
- The rise of professionalism in the U.S. armed forces has
been a hotly debated topic. Some, like Samuel P. Huntington,
believe that it emerged in the postbellum era. Others, like William
B. Skelton, assert that the U.S. Army had the ingredients of
a profession before the Civil War. This study contends that the
U.S. Navy also exhibited professional qualities before the Civil
War. Beginning in 1845, it had a centralized school for selecting
and training officers at Annapolis, Maryland. Then, at sea, as
students progressed from year to year, the navy assessed almost
scientifically their abilities as officer-trainees.
-
THE 2006 GEORGE C. MARSHALL LECTURE IN MILITARY HISTORY
Drew Gilpin Faust, " 'Numbers on Top of Numbers': Counting
the Civil War Dead," The Journal of Military History
70 (October 2006): 995-1010.
- The assumption that the government has an obligation to name
and count the military dead only emerged in the United States
as a result of the Civil War experience. A massive postwar reburial
program dedicated to identifying and reinterring every Union
soldier was paralleled by intensive public and private efforts
accurately to number the war's losses, which had not been carefully
compiled by either North or South during the conflict. In an
era of increasing preoccupation with statistics, an enumeration
of the dead came to seem imperative to understanding the Civil
War's unanticipated scale and destructiveness.
-
Vincent Orange, "The German Air Force Is Already 'The
Most Powerful in Europe': Two Royal Air Force Officers Report
on a Visit to Germany, 6-15 October 1936," The Journal
of Military History 70 (October 2006): 1011-1028.
- In October 1936, two exceptional Royal Air Force pilots flew
privately to Germany to see what they could discover about the
Luftwaffe. Their report, now in Britain's National Archives,
has never been published, but was used by Winston Churchill in
his efforts to alert the British government to the danger of
aerial attack. The airmen were well received everywhere and permitted
to fly on their own over Berlin. They examined and even flew
the latest bombers and met members of the élite Richthofen
Squadron, Ernst Udet, and Heinrich Koppenberg. Greatly impressed
by German air power, they urged the British Air Ministry to focus
on a Wellington-Blenheim strike force, backed by Hurricane and
Spitfire fighters.
HISTORIOGRAPHICAL ESSAY
Michael Alfred Peszke, "An Introduction to English-Language
Literature on the Polish Armed Forces in World War II," The
Journal of Military History 70 (October 2006): 1029-1064.
- This article reviews all dedicated English-language studies
of the Polish military in World War II. It follows a chronological
order subdivided by separation into Land Army, Air, Naval, Underground,
and Clandestine and Intelligence Services. The review begins
with the September 1939 Campaign, and follows the European war
as it pertained to the Polish cause. This bibliography is supplemented
by references to specific campaign studies, where Polish contributions
are discussed in more than just a passing reference. Finally,
it includes references to archival material when the discussion
of the bibliography in its historical context requires such clarification.
-
Douglas Porch, "Writing History in the 'End of History'
Era-Reflections on Historians and the GWOT," The Journal
of Military History 70 (October 2006): 1065-1080.
- Military history can and should play a role, even a prominent
role, in debates over strategy and policy in wartime. The problem
begins when partisans, polemicists, and ideologues pluck examples
from past military campaigns or wars that are subsequently interpreted
in ways that support policy and strategy decisions. In the case
of the current "long war," neoconservative and neoimperialist
historians construct and reconstruct interpretations of the past
in ways deliberately calculated to promote and sustain a policy
agenda. The danger is that history twisted by some partisans
into an apologia for contemporary American policy, and ultimately
as a weapon of intimidation to silence doubt, dissent, disagreement,
and even debate, serves neither the cause of history, nor of
policy and strategy formulation, nor even of democracy in a moment
of national peril.
Roger Spiller, "Military History and Its Fictions,"
The Journal of Military History 70 (October 2006): 1081-1098.
- The conception and practice of military history, once regarded
as the foundation for any understanding of war, has responded
cautiously to the momentous intellectual and contemporary developments
of the past half century. While our conservative habits have
encouraged a degree of professional maturity as a field, military
history's intellectual authority has declined as other disciplines
have taken more adventurous approaches to the study of war and
assumed a more prominent role in contemporary military criticism.
Yet because of military history's intellectual progress, the
power of military history to range beyond its conservatism and
to address contemporary military problems is greater than ever.
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