Merlin's Cave
 Destination:  Accueil» English Books » General » The Shield of Achilles: War, Peace, and the Course of History  
Merlin Site Links
  • Store Home
  • Site Home
  • Categories
    Livres
    DVD
    L'electronique
    English Books
    Jeux Video
    Musique
    Logiciels
    Jeux et Jouets
    Video
    Related Categories
    • General
    Politics
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • History & Theory
    Politics
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • Relations
    International
    Politics
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    • Practical Politics
    Politics
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • General AAS
    Politics
    Nonfiction
    Subjects
    Livres en anglais
    • History of the State
    Political Science
    Social Sciences
    Nonfiction
    Subjects

    The Shield of Achilles: War, Peace, and the Course of History

    The Shield of Achilles: War, Peace, and the Course of History

    agrandir agrandir 
    Auteur: Philip Bobbitt
    Créateur: Philip Bobbitt
    Éditeur: Anchor Books

    Prix de liste: EUR 14,26
    Acheter Neuf: EUR 11,00
    Vous épargnez: EUR 3,26 (23%)

    Quantité 999 Disponible


    Neuf (8) D'occasion (3) de EUR 11,00

    Classement parmi les ventes: 10157

    Média: Broche
    Édition: Reprint
    Pages: 960
    Poids (kg): 1.5
    Dimension (cm): 8 x 5 x 1.7

    ISBN: 0385721382
    Code Décimal Dewey: 327
    EAN: 9780385721387
    ASIN: 0385721382

    Date de publication: Septembre 2003
    Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres
    Condition: Neuf - En parfait etat. S'il vous plait, patientez 4-14 jours ouvres pour la livraison - Remboursement garantie - Plus d'un million de clients servis et satisfaits - Assistance a la clientele en Francais.

    Revues éditoriales:

    Amazon.co.uk
    The scope of Philip Bobbitt's The Shield of Achilles is breathtaking: the interplay, over the last six centuries, among war, jurisprudence, and the reshaping of countries ("states," in Bobbitt's vocabulary). Bobbitt posits that certain wars should be deemed epochal--that is, seen as composed of many "smaller" wars. For example, according to Bobbitt the epochal war of the 20th century began in 1914 and ended with the collapse of communism in 1990. These military affairs--and their subsequent "ultimate" peace agreements--have caused, each in their own way, revolutionary reconstructions of the idea and actuality of statehood and, following, of relationships between these various new entities. Of these reconstructions (including the princely state, the kingly state, and the nation-state), Bobbitt is most interested in the current incarnation, which he calls the market-state: one whose borders are scuffed and hazy at best (certainly compared to earlier territorial markers) and whose strengths, weaknesses, citizens, and enemies roam across cyberspace rather than plains and valleys. The Shield of Achilles is massive, erudite, and demanding--at once highly abstract and extremely detailed. There is about it an air of detached erudition, one noticeably free of the easy "decline and fall" hysteria too often present in contemporary historical analyses.--H O'Billovich

    Amazon.com
    The scope of Philip Bobbitt's The Shield of Achilles is breathtaking: the interplay, over the last six centuries, among war, jurisprudence, and the reshaping of countries ("states," in Bobbitt's vocabulary). Bobbitt posits that certain wars should be deemed epochal--that is, seen as composed of many "smaller" wars. For example, according to Bobbitt the epochal war of the 20th century began in 1914 and ended with the collapse of communism in 1990. These military affairs--and their subsequent "ultimate" peace agreements--have caused, each in their own way, revolutionary reconstructions of the idea and actuality of statehood and, following, of relationships between these various new entities. Of these reconstructions (including the princely state, the kingly state, and the nation-state), Bobbitt is most interested in the current incarnation, which he calls the market-state: one whose borders are scuffed and hazy at best (certainly compared to earlier territorial markers) and whose strengths, weaknesses, citizens, and enemies roam across cyberspace rather than plains and valleys. The Shield of Achilles is massive, erudite, and demanding--at once highly abstract and extremely detailed. There is about it an air of detached erudition, one noticeably free of the easy "decline and fall" hysteria too often present in contemporary historical analyses. --H. O'Billovich

    Quantité 999 Disponible


    Merlin's Cave