Abstract

I. Democracy: Bellicose, Imperial, or Idealistic? Democratic Warfare, Ancient and Modern, Victor Hanson The American Imperium, Ronald Steel The American Empire: A Case of Mistaken Identity, Robert Kagan II. Categorizing Wars: Civil or Hegemonic, Decisive or Cyclical? When Sparta Is Sparta but Athens Isn't Athens: Democracy and the Korean War, Bruce Cumings Stalin and the Decision for War in Korea, Kathryn Weathersby The Effects of the Peloponnesian (Athenian) War on Athenian and Spartan Societies, Paul Cartledge III. Third Forces, or Shrimps between Whales The Case of Plataea: Small States and the (Re-)Invention of Political Realism, Gregory Crane The Korean War and North Korean Politics, Dae-Suk Suh The Korean War and South Korean Politics, Kongdan Oh IV. Demagogues? or Domestic Politics in Democracies at War? McCarthyism and the Korean War, Ellen Schrecker Korea, the Cold War, and American Democracy, Stephen Whitfield Warfare, Democracy, and the Cult of Personality, Jennifer Roberts V. Realism, Militarism, and the Culture of Democracies at War Thucydides Theoretikos/Thucydides Histor: Realist Theory and the Challenge of History, Josiah Ober Father of All - Destroyer of All: War in Late Fifth-Century Athenian Discourse and Ideology, Kurt Raaflaub Characters and Characteristics of Korean War Novels, Dong-wook Shin

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