Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1. Unser gehasstester Feind: German Anglophobia and the 'spirit of 1914'; 2. The cultural war: German intellectuals and England; 3. German war aims and propaganda against England; 4. 'U-boat demagogy' and the crisis of Bethmann-Hollweg's chancellorship; 5. The submarine crisis deepens; 6. The Anglo-American powers and the collapse of the German empire; Epilogue; Notes; Bibliography; Index.
The first major study of German attitudes towards England during the Great War, 1914–18.
'... a comprehensive monograph about a central aspect of early twentieth-century German political culture.' German History '... deserves to be read not only by specialists of the First World War, but by anyone who wants to understand the course of German history in the first half of the twentieth century.' Stefan Berger, English Historical Review 'Stibbe vividly portrays the spread of Anglophobia through German literature and everyday culture.' Sven Oliver Muller, German Historical Institute Bulletin 'This provocative book ... asks 'When and where did the environmental movement begin?' ... The strength of the book is historical and much of its evidence analyses the work of the Indian Forest Department from the 1850s onwards.' Brian Ellis, Geography '... impressively researched and trenchantly argued ... this is a very good book ...'. J. M. Bourne, University of Birmingham, History
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