Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife
Rules of a different type of war Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam John A. Nagl INTRODUCTION There are two powerful ideas which I am constantly trying to place before my students. The first...
T O P I C S I N T H E R I S E A N D F A L L O F E M P I R E S
Current Edition / Featured Article
Feb 14, 2014
Rules of a different type of war Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam John A. Nagl INTRODUCTION There are two powerful ideas which I am constantly trying to place before my students. The first...
Current Edition / Featured Article
Sep 20, 2013
A NEW METHOD OF CONSIDERING HISTORY A Sense of Where You Are by Anne Knowles EDITOR’S INTRODUCTION Early in his career one of our finest writers, John McPhee, wrote a memorable book about Bill...
Current Edition / Featured Article
Aug 18, 2013
The Battle of Stalingrad is instructional treasure. It is such a vast topic, one so little-known by American students, and one that it is almost endlessly engaging
Current Edition / Featured Article
Oct 25, 2011
My students always get a kick out of writing like this – provocative, smart, funny, and taking with a big idea. In this case, the idea is really big: that radar was a precursor to GPS in giving us a way to
Current Edition / Featured Article
Mar 11, 2011
With the 1897 publication of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, the English were exposed to a terrifying Gothic novel that expressed the fears of the age: Questions of invasion, identity, and war were entangled in a dramatic story about vampires feeding on women and
Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife
14 Feb, 2014
What Could Lee See at Gettysburg?
20 Sep, 2013
Dracula as a Foretelling of WWI
11 Mar, 2011
18 Aug, 2013