The Legend of the Mutilated Victory: Italy, the Great War, and the Paris Peace Conference, 1915-1919
By (Author) H. James Burgwyn
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st September 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
First World War
Warfare and defence
940.3
Hardback
368
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
709g
Italy emerged from World War I triumphant but ostracized from the comity of victors, which led to the notion in Italy that a war had been won but a peace lost. The Legend of the Mutilated Victory demonstrates that Italy's conflict with America over the nature of the peace was a direct outgrowth of Italy's ongoing quarrels with the Allies, quarrels that formed the basis of the mutilated victory. In a clear and cogently argued narrative, Burgwyn reassesses Sidney Sonnino's diplomacy as he lead Italy to victory in the imbroglio of the war and domestic political intrigue. He observes the impact of domestic politics and the Supreme Command on Sonnino's wartime diplomacy, impartially describes Sonnino's efforts at the Paris Peace Conference, and also points out the failures in Sonnino's approach. This is the first book in any language to analyze Italian diplomacy from the outbreak of the war to the Paris Peace Conference.
.,."Burgwyn writes on a large canvas in a nicely balanced chronological account of a thousand details. Advanced undergraduates and above."-Choice
...Burgwyn writes on a large canvas in a nicely balanced chronological account of a thousand details. Advanced undergraduates and above.-Choice
The author skillfully weaves his way through the tangled web of wartime and postwar diplomacy, utilizing most of the available offical archival sources.-Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism
..."Burgwyn writes on a large canvas in a nicely balanced chronological account of a thousand details. Advanced undergraduates and above."-Choice
"The author skillfully weaves his way through the tangled web of wartime and postwar diplomacy, utilizing most of the available offical archival sources."-Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism
H. JAMES BURGWYN is Professor of History at West Chester University. He is the author of Il Revisionismo Fascista: La sfida di Mussolini alle grandi potenze nei Balcani sul Danubio 1925-1933, and a co-editor of The Italian Refuge: Rescue of Jews During the Holocaust. He has also published a number of articles in both Italian and American journals on Italian foreign policy. Dr. Burgwyn is currently writing a book on Italy's descent into World War II.