Paperback
+ free ebook
+ free ebook
+ free ebook
‘How had the world by 1914 become susceptible to a disastrous systemic breakdown? The one American historian who rose to this analytical challenge was Paul Schroeder. These historical insights have an obvious urgency today’
Nicholas Mulder, Financial Times
Stealing Horses to Great Applause is arguably the finest consideration yet of the origins of the First World War. Breaking with accounts focusing on the actions of a single state or the final countdown to hostilities, Paul W. Schroeder analyzes the systemic crisis that engulfed the Great Powers in 1914. Increasingly, they had become more interested in colonial expansion abroad (‘stealing horses to great applause’, in the old Spanish adage) than in the traditional conventions of European peacemaking. They forgot the rule that a balance of power required the preservation of all its essential actors, including the weakest of them, Austria-Hungary. This the British too failed to heed. The Central Powers may have started the war, but that does not mean they in any real sense caused it.
Stealing Horses includes appraisals of Niall Ferguson and A. J. P. Taylor as well as an extensive unpublished final work rethinking the First World War as ‘the last eighteenth-century war’.
With an introduction by Perry Anderson.
The description and cover above are taken from the Paperback (2026) edition. Other editions may vary.
A historian of remarkable chronological breadth and a fiercely independent mind. Great historians have a life, and they have an afterlife. Paul W. Schroeder’s may just have begun
Probably the foremost expert on the history of international politics in the world
A powerful intellect, a meticulous and innovative researcher who transformed his field
Perhaps the most distinguished diplomatic historian of his generation. He thought hard about the fundamental issues he was concerned with. What he had to say was always stimulating, always worth reading
Few knew old Europe as intimately as Schroeder did. His cogent argument concerning the centrality of international relations is one which historians of all stripes ignore at their peril
A kaleidoscopic set of essays on the European state system in the century leading up to and during the Great War… written with calm and analytical rigor.
A gem that calls into question some of the standard interpretations of the war’s origins and its outbreak.