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Treaty of Versailles, The: A Reassessment after 75 Years


Treaty of Versailles, The: A Reassessment after 75 Years

Hardback by Boemeke, Manfred F. (United Nations University Press, Tokyo); Feldman, Gerald D. (University of California, Berkeley); Glaser, Elisabeth (German Historical Institute)

Treaty of Versailles, The: A Reassessment after 75 Years

£133.00

ISBN:
9780521621328
Publication Date:
13 Sep 1998
Language:
English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Pages:
688 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 15 May 2024
Treaty of Versailles, The: A Reassessment after 75 Years

Description

This book on the Treaty of Versailles constitutes a new synthesis of peace conference scholarship. It illuminates events from the armistice in 1918 to the signing of the treaty in 1919, scrutinizing the motives, actions and constraints that informed decision-making by the French, American and English politicians who bore the principal responsibility for drafting the peace settlement. It also addresses German reactions to the draft treaty and the final agreement, as well as Germany's role in the immediate postwar period. The findings call attention to diverging peace aims within the American and Allied camps and underscore the degree to which the negotiators themselves considered the Versailles Treaty a work in progress. A detailed examination of the proceedings from the point of view of the main protagonists forms the core of the investigation.

Contents

Acknowledgments; Introduction Manfred F. Boemeke, Gerald D. Feldman, and Elisabeth Glaser; Prologue: 1919-1945-1989 Ronald Steel; Part I. Peace Planning and the Actualities of the Armistice: 1. Germany's peace aims and the domestic and international constraints Klaus Schwabe; 2. 'Had we known how bad things were in Germany, we might have got stiffer terms': Great Britain and the German Armistice David French; 3. French war aims and peace planning David Stevenson; 4. Wilsonian concepts and international realities at the end of the war Thomas J. Knock; 5. A comment Alan Sharp; Part II. The Peacemakers and their Home Fronts: 6. Great Britain: the home front Erik Goldstein; 7. The French peacemakers and their home front Georges-Henri Soutou; 8. The American mission to negotiate peace: an historian looks back Lawrence E. Gelfand; 9. Between Compiègne and Versailles: the Germans on the way from a misunderstood defeat to an unwanted peace Fritz Klein; 10. A comment Antony Lentin; Part III. The Reconstruction of Europe and the Settlement of Accounts: 11. The Minorities question at the Paris Peace Conference: the Polish Minority Treaty, June 28, 1919 Carole Fink; 12. The Rhineland question: West European Security at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Stephen A. Schuker; 13. The Polish question Piotr S. Wandycz; 14. Smoke and mirrors: in smoke-filled rooms and the Galeries des Glaces Sally Marks; 15. The making of the economic peace Elisabeth Glaser; 16. The balance of payments question: Versailles and after Niall Ferguson; 17. A comment Gerald D. Feldman; Part IV. The Legacy and Consequences of Versailles: 18. The Soviet Union and Versailles Jon Jacobson; 19. Versailles and international diplomacy William R. Keylor; 20. The League of Nations: toward a new appreciation of its history Antoine Fleury; 21. A comment Diane B. Kunz; Part V. Antecedents and Aftermaths: Reflections on the War Guilt Question and the Settlement: 22. Max Weber and the Peace Treaty of Versailles Wolfgang J. Mommsen; 23. The construction of the American interpretation: the pro-Treaty version William C. Widenor; 24. British revisionism Michael Graham Fry; 25. Woodrow Wilson's image of Germany, the war-guilt question, and the Treaty of Versailles Michael Graham Fry; 26. A comment Gordon Martel; Bibliography; Index.

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