Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-8476-9645-1 • Paperback • November 2001 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
978-0-7425-9925-3 • eBook • November 2001 • $46.50 • (£36.00)
Robert H. Zieger is professor of history at the University of Florida.
Chapter 1 Chronology
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 A World at War, 1914-15
Chapter 4 War, Peace, War
Chapter 5 Mobilizing for War
Chapter 6 Over There
Chapter 7 Class, Race, Gender
Chapter 8 Making the Peace
Chapter 9 Postwar America
Chapter 10 Questions for Americans
In this captivating and clearly presented work, noted University of Florida historian Zieger (The CIO, 1935-1955) explores the relatively brief role of the U.S. in WWI.....
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Zieger's deft historical synthesis of American society during WW I makes this volume informative for scholars and teachers, interesting for general readers, and especially useful for students. A superb synthesis, for all levels.....
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Prize-winning historian Robert H. Zieger has written another exemplary book—this one a judicious and insightful examination of the American experience during the Great War. In this eminently readable, thoughtful, and well-reseached work, he has produceda masterful synthesis that instructs, challenges, fascinates. A model of scholarly analysis, Zieger's study will engage the interest of specialists, students, and general readers alike....
— LeRoy Ashby
World War I was the seminal cataclysm of the twentieth century. Professor Zieger's lucid volume is a discerning and provocative exploration of its consequences for the American people.....
— George H. Nash, PhD, professional historian, presidential biographer, and author of “The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America Since 1945”
Robert Zieger, the distinguished historian of labor, has produced in America's Great War a superb overview of the national experience in World War I. He adds to diplomatic, political, and military history a close examination of the war's impact on women, minorities, and workers. He provides a lucid and fair-minded examination of how America helped the Allies win the war and lose the peace, and incisively analyzes Woodrow Wilson, the conflicted, obsessive self-defeating president around whom the entire war turned. Taking advantage of the latest scholarship, while weaving it skillfully into his own powerful narrative, Zieger has made this the best introduction yet to America's role in the defining event of the 20th Century...
— William L. O'Neill, Professor of History, Rutgers University; author of Coming Apart