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Timothy Burke's avatar

I don't read all that much military history but I do find it interesting when I do. I think it has some attractions that don't require a particular liking for war:

1. That it has an inherent drama to it, in that the people in a war (or supporting it at home, in the era of total war) are at risk for losing their lives, their homes, everything; and that it has (usually) a finite end of some kind or another--one side wins, one side loses, both sides call it a draw.

2. For microhistorians, the intellectual attraction of war is that contingency and agency are unusually visible and tangible in military conflicts, particularly in battles--particular decisions get made that have consequences, the difference between soldiers holding a position and soldiers scattering in disarray is visible, etc.; the added tension is that soldiers also often feel they have little to no agency, even their commanders--that circumstance, environment, etc. force decisions they'd rather not make. (Arguably that's the role of strategy: to force an enemy into a situation where all the decisions are bad ones.)

3. War also seems to me to be an unusual case of coordinated collective action--well, unusual and typical in terms of its frequency--that tells us some interesting things about what societies might be capable of in other directions. (Hence the popular use of "war on....X" as a political metaphor.) When I read about wars I'm often struck by that, even when they're small-scale and very limited.

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John Deacon's avatar

I think you're right. Men at war have the ultimate camaraderie (at least how it's depicted in books, movies, TV shows). It's like the perfect [insert sport here] team being thrown into a life-and-death fight against evil. Although I am just a level one Dad History mage... Better up my game.

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