This innovative book tells a unique story about D-Day, one that does
not concentrate on the soldiers who hit the beaches or the admirals
and generals who commanded them. Instead, Colin Flint brings
engineers, businessmen, and bureaucrats to center stage. Through them,
he offers a different way of thinking about war, one that sees war as
an ongoing set of processes in which seemingly isolated acts are part
of broader historical developments. Developing the concept
ofgeopolitical constructs to understand wars, the author connects
specific events to long-term and global geopolitical arrangements.
Focusing on the construction of the Mulberry Harbours—massive
artificial structures dragged across the English Channel in the
immediate wake of the invading force—Flint illustrates how the
process of making war links a vast array of people, institutions, and
places, as well as past events and future outcomes. He argues that the
people who designed and built the Harbours became geopolitical
subjects by producing pieces of engineering that helped shape the
course of World War Two and the Cold War that followed, which created
a militarized trans-Atlantic that remains today. Using previously
unpublished archival material to give voice to those who made the
Mulberry Harbours and wartime strategy, this original study broadens
the historical and geographical scope of how we understand war,
showing how the everyday actions of individuals made, and were made
by, geopolitical settings.
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The Mulberry Harbours, World War Two, and the Making of a Militarized Transatlantic
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781442266681
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter