| The First World
War is a seminal historical event; an historical caesura whose
aftershocks still resonate. For Eric Hobsbawm, it began the Age
of Extremes the start of the short twentieth
century lasting from 1914 to 1991 in which fascism, communism
and liberal democracy clashed for world hegemony.(1)
This contest for power dominated world history in the twentieth
century and resulted in two world wars, the Cold War and the
end of European empire. For Sir Michael Howard, the Great War
shattered the hopes and self-confidence with which the
century began. (2) One
has only to open general history textbooks to see that 1914 has
become the established jumping-off point for most examinations
of the recent past. This periodisation, with 1914 marking a break
between an old and new world, is contestable. The fin de siècle
mood embedded in Edvard Munchs The Scream (1893)
or Pablo Picassos Les Demoiselles dAvignon
(1906-7) suggests a world in motion long before 1914. Indeed,
the idea of pre-war change is well expressed in books such as
George Dangerfields The Strange Death of Liberal England
(Constable & Co.; London, 1936) and Modris Eksteins
Rites of Spring: The Great War and the Birth of the Modern
Era (Bantam; London, 1989).
However, notwithstanding the debate on continuity and change,
the war that erupted in 1914 still reverberates, arousing passionate
and on-going debate among historians. Over the years, all aspects
of the First World War have come in for intense scrutiny: experience,
memory, tactics, operational method, strategy, gender, empire,
race, consequences and, of course, the origins of the war. Indeed,
the origins of the war were the first entry point for scholars
examining the First World War. Even before the guns fell silent
in 1918, books were being published many (most?) partisan
and biased that sought to provide an answer to the question
of why such a terrible event had happened. There followed a deluge
of books on the origins of the war that has continued to this
day. The origins of the Great War have become one of the key
debates in contemporary history. The linkage between 1914 and
the contemporary debate on a united Germany and its future in
Europe has only heightened interest in the origins of the Great
War.
The corpus on the origins of the war is a daunting prospect,
even for the fastest reader. Thus, do we really need another
book on the subject? Annika Mombauer of the Open University has
produced a volume that synthesises the existing scholarship on
the origins of the war into one handy tome. This is no mean feat
and her volume bears obvious comparison to John Langdons
excellent July 1914: The Long Debate (Berg; Oxford, 1991).
But, crucially, Langdons hardback volume is out of print.
(Which begs the question: why has Berg Publishing not produced
a reprint in paperback?) As with Langdon, Mombauer has combined
brevity with depth to produce a book with intellectual clout
that stretches beyond the seminar study format without straying
into the specialist monograph field.(3)
Mombauer has digested and processed a mass of information and
produced a readable, informative and lucid account of the wars
origins. It is to be highly recommended. Her work broadens the
discussion from Langdons focus on the events of July 1914,
and includes the latest debates that Langdons slightly
dated account unavoidably omits. The volume under review also
benefits from Mombauers command of the German-language
material.
Mombauers book works on two inter-connected levels. Firstly,
it is an account of the changing historiographical perspectives
on the origins of the war. Mombauer takes the reader on a journey
through the ups-and-downs of who or what was responsible for
war in 1914. For the initiated, this examination will not be
new but for the reader coming at this subject for the first time
the obvious market for such a book this is a first-rate
synthesis of the vast scholarship on the subject. Mombauer starts
with an introductory survey of the events leading up to the war.
It has to be said that this survey seems rather superfluous,
adding little to the analytical strands that tie together this
book. Thereafter, Mombauer organises her analysis into four sections.
Chapter one starts with the debate during and immediately after
the First World War; chapter two looks at the historiography
in the inter-war years; the third chapter takes the debate forward
to the 1960s and examines the seismic impact of the work of the
Hamburg historian Fritz Fischer; and a final chapter tackles
the current debate on origins of the war.
What stands out from Mombauers discussion is just how
policy-relevant is the discussion on the origins the First World
War. The debate on who started the war was, indeed still is,
of critical importance if one wants to understand the future
course of European history. In particular, there is the question
of Germany a key focus of Mombauers study. If Germany
wanted to evade the Versailles settlement after 1918, she needed
to avoid the charge of having planned an aggressive war in 1914.
After 1945, if she wanted to avoid the charge of continuity in
German history stretching from the Kaiser to Hitler, drawing
a distinction between the accidental war in 1914 and the war
planned by Hitler in 1939 was even more crucial. In the context
of this argument on German foreign policy, the writing of German
history moved centre-stage and Mombauer sets out to show how
Clio was deceived in the years after 1918 and, for while, after
1945.
In her frantic attempts to prove that she was as much wronged
as the other protagonists in the Great War, Germany after 1918
set about traducing history to prove that Europe fell into the
abyss of war through the general machinations of all parties
concerned. Initially, this meant tackling the Versailles settlement,
and in particular article 231, that ascribed war guilt to Germany.
Therefore, in the 1920s and 1930s, the German government encouraged
and sponsored a misrepresentation of history in which all the
European states were responsible for the war that broke out in
August 1914. In this, Germany, through government-run publications
and the mobilisation of German historians, was largely successful
in her attempts to rewrite history, so as to dodge the charge
that she had planned and started the war. Sympathetic foreign
historians aided this revisionism, to the extent that by the
time the Second World War broke out there was little impetus
to blame Germany for the war of 1914-1918.
After the Second World War, German historians fully accepted
the charge of an aggressive war waged by Germany from 1939. Germans
accepted the grotesque character of Hitler and his regime, but
this acceptance stressed that Hitler was exceptional, an aberration,
who in no way represented the general course of German history.
This all changed in the 1960s with the historiographical shift
caused by the work of Fritz Fischer. Fischer produced two ground-breaking
books on German war aims and German planning for war that completely
changed the debate on the origins of the 1914-1918 war. Fischers
argument that Germany planned the war and desired control over
continental Europe caused a huge uproar in Germany. If one accepted
the aggressive intent in German foreign policy in 1914, it was
but a small step to make the connection with the war launched
in 1939. Maybe the Kaiser and Hitler were not that dissimilar.
The contentious nature of Fischers views meant that his
arguments soon spilled over into the TV and the media. Having
dealt comprehensively and effectively with the Fischer debate,
and shown just how immense was the impact of Fischers work,
Mombauer then outlines the post-Fischer perspectives on the origins
of the war. As Mombauer argues, this more recent work, informed
by Fischer, provides a more nuanced examination of the origins
of the war that moves away from simplistic notions of German
guilt.
While this book provides the reader with a clear account of
the shifting debates surrounding the origins of the war, it is
a book infused with Fischers ideas (and the work of later
academics in the Fischer mould such as John Röhl). This
is the second level on which one can approach this book. The
notion that Germany, in some measure, was responsible for the
war provides a parallel pathway of study in The Origins of
the First World War: Controversies and Consensus. The focus
on Germany helps raises this study from an undergraduate text
in which the author simply presents the different points of view.
Mombauer has a point to prove. Unlike Langdon, who is happy to
lay out the arguments, Mombauer has an argument. She argues that
Fischer was basically right and German attempts to write her
guilt out of the history books should be recognised for what
they are. This approach gives the book a passionate feel that
makes for a good read and provides a clear line of argument through
the book , which leaves the reader with a knowledge not just
of all the perspectives surrounding the wars origins but
also of the key role Germany plays in any understanding of why
war erupted in August 1914. Providing an excellent entry point
into the labyrinth of debates on the origins of the Great War,
this book will surely become a core text for students looking
for a platform from which they can delve further into this historiographical
minefield.
September 2002
Notes
(1) Eric Hobsbawm, The
Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century, 1914-1991 (Michael
Joseph; London, 1994).
(2) Michael Howard and William
Roger Louis, The Oxford History of the Twentieth Century (Oxford
University Press; Oxford, 1998) p. 9.
(3) Indeed, Mombauer's recent
work includes her monograph on the origins of the First World
War: Helmuth von Moltke and the Origins of the First World
War (Cambridge University Press; Cambridge, 2001; for a review
of this work, see no. 199). |