Abstract

Wayne Lee's review essay offers an excellent overview of some of the most interesting literature to appear in the field of in the last decade. It is a welcome stocktaking, especially since we are at a moment when it is appropriate to assess the role of the in American and American society. There is no denying that what we typically call military history has been a controversial discipline inside the academy. This is understandable, and not wholly inappropriate, since democratic societies ought to treat all issues carefully and with self-awareness. But care and self-awareness do not?and should not?equal avoidance. Among its many roles, scholarship plays a civic function: it facilitates our understanding of the institutions we have created and opens a debate on their purpose. By focusing on literature that draws explicit connections be tween American institutions and American society and culture, Lee has given us an excellent point of departure for an important and timely discussion.1 Americans seem to have a appetite for history, and every year the sale of trade press books on topics is brisk. The reasons are not hard to discern. Military his tory gives center stage to events that are profoundly and immediately consequential: the lives of hundreds?or hundreds of thousands?can rest on decisions made under stress. Those who write in the discipline can work on a vast canvas full of movement and energy; they can, simultaneously, draw attention to the details shaping the choices made by those in command of events. The pace, scope, and urgency of war tend to telescope time and change, and to illuminate those human proclivities and characteristics?includ ing character flaws?that can assume an importance far greater than they ever would in peacetime. Contingency matters too, as James M. McPherson stressed in his astute and beautifully rendered of the Civil War, Battle Cry of Freedom. The outcome on a battlefield, as at Antietam or Gettysburg, can matter terribly.2 But if all those factors can result in gripping and important work, they can also result in products that fill academic historians with skepticism?and even dread. Those of us on the academic side of often find ourselves working to escape associa tion with popular writing that grasps too readily at great man theories or triumphalism.

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