First World War: Still No End in Sight
By Frank Furedi
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That the conflicts unleashed by Great War did not end in 1918 is well known. World War II and the Cold War clearly constitute key moments in the drama that began in August 1914. This book argues that the battle of ideas which crystallised during the course of the Great War continue to the present. It claims that the disputes about lifestyles and identity – the Culture Wars of today – are only the latest expressions of a century long conflict.
There are many influences that contributed to the outbreak of World War One. One significant influence was the cultural tension and unease that disposed significant numbers of artists, intellectuals and young people to regard the War as an opportunity give meaning to their existence. Later these tensions merged with social unrest and expressed themselves through the new ideologies of the Left and the Right. While these ideologies have become exhausted the conflicts of culture persist to this date. That is why there is Still No End In Sight for the battle of ideas set in motion in August 1914.
Modern wars did not only lead to the loss of millions of lives. Wars also played a significant role in changing attitudes towards the political ideals of modern time. The Great War called into question the future of liberal democracy. It led to the emergence of radical ideologies, which were in turn discredited through the experience of the Second World War and the Cold War. The current Culture Wars have significantly eroded the status of the values associated with modernity.
Frank Furedi
Frank Furedi is Professor of Sociology at the University of Kent, UK. He is the author of fourteen books including Why Education isn't Educating (2010), The Politics of Fear (2007), Where have all the Intellectuals Gone? (2005), Therapy Culture (2003) and Paranoid Parenting (2001). Furedi's books offer an authoritative yet lively account of key developments in contemporary cultural life, with a particular interest in precautionary culture and risk aversion in the West. He is the UK sociologist most widely cited by the UK media and his books have been translated into eleven languages. He appears frequently on television and radio in the English speaking world and beyond and he publishes regular articles with a range of newspapers.
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First World War - Frank Furedi
Preface
Writing about the First World War often turns into a search for beginnings. Something occurred in 1914 that makes it very challenging to grasp the century to come. This difficulty does not simply pertain to understanding what led up to the war or what were its causes, but also to the broader existential issues confronting European and, to a lesser extent, American society. Now and again great literature helps us to make an imaginative leap into that fast-vanishing world of Kings, Emperors, Tsars, pioneering trade unionists and complacent Edwardian middle classes.
Joseph Roth’s Radzetzky March takes us on a journey that begins from the secure world of Emperor Franz Joseph and moves on to the terrain that will soon see the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The book conveys an atmosphere where an irresistible force ruptures people’s links with the security of their taken-for-granted assumptions. The main characters in Roth’s novel, the Trotta family, are ‘homesick’ for the old Kaiser. For reasons that are not entirely clear, they have lost their place in the world and are existentially homeless. Soon they, along with hundreds of thousands of other homeless minds, will find themselves lurching towards the battlefields of the Great War. For some this war served as a distraction, for a minority it offered the promise of a home, others regarded it as an opportunity to fight for a just cause. Surprisingly there were very few cynics who questioned the call to arms and even less who actively opposed it.
The First World War disappointed all who looked for answers in the battlefields of Europe. Instead of providing answers, it also threw up problems that continue to serve as a source of conflict – military, ideological, cultural – to the present time. First World War – Still no End in Sight attempts to explore the changing ideological and cultural forms through which the issues raised during the Great War have continue to haunt public life. It concludes that the unresolved tensions within society during the 1914–18 era have undergone a series of mutations and are expressed through the Culture Wars of the twenty-first century.
There were many ideological casualties along the road that led from the heady summer of 1914 to the present day. Indeed, as this historical sociology of the battle for ideas explains, there are very few ideologies left standing. And though the ideal of democracy just about survived, it is in serious need of intellectual attention. This book is written in the hope that this ideal can be cultivated and given greater moral depth so that the century-long war can finally come to an end.
I never met my Grandfather, who unwillingly served in the Hungarian army on the Italian front and who was delighted when illness led to his early return to civilian life in early 1916. He must have known that this war never ended when he was taken away in 1944 and forced into a slave-labour battalion. When he froze to death somewhere near the Hungarian-Ukrainian border the Second World War was about to come to its final phase of armed conflict. But the war of ideas continued and especially those of us with strong cultural connections to the eastern part of Europe never quite believe that what began in 1914 will ever be over. Of course it will as long as there are those who are willing to step up to affirm and develop the legacy of humanism and the Enlightenment.
Faversham
15 August 2013
Introduction: The war without end
This book is about a war that is still going on. The cause of World War One still remains a topic of controversy. Disputes about the source of this conflict are not confined to pointing the finger of blame at a particular party such as the Prussian military caste or French generals seeking revenge for the humiliation suffered in the war of 1870 and the loss of Alsace-Lorraine to Bismarck. Disputes also centre on the role of other factors such as the arms race, nationalism, imperialism or domestic social pressures. No doubt all these forces had a significant influence on the unfolding series of events that to led this most unexpected and unusual war. One unique feature of this conflict was the widespread enthusiasm with which the public greeted its outbreak. That so many ordinary Europeans identified with their nation’s war drive was shaped by the zeitgeist of the time. European societies were permeated by the vague sensibility of a life bereft of direction and purpose. A longing for meaning by millions of people estranged from the world they inhabited led many to regard the war as a medium through which their life could be affirmed. The cause they embraced was that of a ‘way of life’, which is why German propaganda referred to it as a ‘war of cultures’.
Writing about meaning is a tricky if not a dangerous enterprise. Since the search for it appears to possess a general and eternal quality, there is a risk that its exploration collapses into a banal discussion about the human condition in isolation from the influences through which it is experienced. But something was in the air on the day in June 1914 when Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated in Sarajevo. The cultural and emotional climate was one that was hospitable to a display of fervent passion. The historian A. J. P. Taylor wrote how even ‘the traditional standards of art and culture were being broken down, as if artists unconsciously anticipated the destruction of the Great War’. He observed that ‘men’s nerves were on edge’.¹
Throughout Europe the language of public life had become steadily more intemperate and displays of a loss of conventional restraint more common. In England, domestic tensions had, by the summer of 1914, led some political figures to endorse violence as a legitimate instrument for resolving political problems. Responding to the unsettled domestic scene confronting him, Winston Churchill asserted that ‘bloodshed no doubt is lamentable’ but ‘there are worse things than bloodshed, even on an extensive scale’.² In the twenty-first century such a casual attitude towards death, especially ‘on an extensive scale’, appears almost incomprehensible, but a century ago many regarded war as a legitimate means for resolving domestic tensions. One study of the cultural climate of those times observed that the language used by Churchill and others ‘suggests that the antagonists had reached the point at which they desired battle almost for the sake of the battle, as a release of feelings that could find no resolution’.³
The relationship between the outbreak of the Great War and the existential conflict experienced by Western society was mediated through the dissonance of culture and the sensibility that there ought to be a way of life to defend and uphold. At the time this sensibility was often expressed through the idiom of nationalism. But as one commentator on the background of the Great War explained, ‘nationalism had penetrated all spheres of human pursuits’. It blended in with other diffuse currents of sentiment that idealized a way of life. It provided the frame through which the aspiration for affirming an exclusive way of life could be experienced with psychological depth.⁴
There is a large corpus of literature that dwells on the role of nationalism prior, during and after the Great War. However what’s often overlooked was that insofar as nationalism played a significant role, it was as the medium through which a cultural solution to the search for meaning could gain definition. In his fascinating study The Anti-Enlightenment Tradition, Zeev Sternheel argues that intellectual and cultural reaction against the Enlightenment led to ‘some form of nationalism’.⁵ But nationalism was not the only medium through which the rejection of rationalism, materialism or of liberal democracy could be expressed and, as we shall see, the cultural revolt against modernity and capitalism has assumed a variety of different forms during the past century. Today, hostility to materialism or consumer culture or rationalism is stridently communicated by post-modernist intellectuals, consumer rights campaigners, anti-capitalists, environmentalists or conservative activists. That these disparate groups, with little in common, voiced similar sentiments indicates that the anti-modernist sentiments can come in different shapes and sizes.
The emphasis that is frequently attached to the role of nationalism is influenced by a retrospective, after-the-event imagination that is dominated by its destructive role in the decades following the Great War. At the time, the intensity of popular support for the war caught even governments by surprise. That it also captured the imagination of the most unlikely group of people – the intellectuals – was also unexpected.
Battle of ideas
There are several interrelated questions that motivate the writing of this book. They all pertain to a remarkable development, which is that so many of the political and philosophical ideas that used to inspire advocates of capitalism as well its bitter opponents have appeared to lose salience in the twenty-first century. Since the onset of the global recession, arguments supporting capitalism and the free markets have lost much of their force. But the erosion of the intellectual influence of market economics has not been paralleled by the ascendancy of alternative models. The question of ‘why there is an absence of alternatives’ immediately raises supplementary queries about what happened to the principles and ideals associated with socialism, welfare-statism, communism or even old-fashioned Keynesianism.
Nor is the loss of intellectual or cultural influence of fundamental principles associated with modernity confined to the domain of politics and economics. The philosophical and cultural assumptions of the Enlightenment – the idea of progress, rationality, human autonomy – enjoy far less valuation than a century ago. In intellectual circles the Enlightenment has been dubbed as a misguided ‘project’ and its allegedly ‘naïve assumptions’ are frequently treated with derision.
This study began as an exploration of three crucial events that continue to shape the way we think about the world. These are the Second World War, the Cold War and the Culture Wars. It was hoped that through focusing on these historical episodes it would be possible to develop an argument that I had raised in an embryonic form in my previous work. To put the argument in its baldest form, it seems that each of these wars had a significant impact on the fate of the key movements of modern times. The Second World War fatally undermined the intellectual and political credibility of the Right. In turn, the Cold War fundamentally discredited many of the ideas and practices associated with the Left. Finally, the Culture Wars fought out in the last quarter of the twentieth century weakened the key ideas associated with modernity and thereby called into question most forms of prevailing authority.
In the course of exploring the political battlefields on which these three wars were fought it became evident that, though significant in their own right, they constituted key moments in a drama that actually began in 1914. There are those who would take the origins of this drama back into the nineteenth century. Some have gone back as far as Luther or German reunification as the beginning of the beginning.⁶ Others locate the origins of the rise of fascism and Nazism in the nineteenth century in irrationalist reaction to the Enlightenment.⁷ There are no doubt a variety of ways of conceptualizing historical continuities. But from the standpoint of today, what’s interesting about World War One is that it represents a key moment of transition between the old and the new. That is why it seems as if the real historical twentieth century began after the end of World War One.⁸
When the Great War began, the political categories of Left and Right had far less significance than they would have in the decades to come. Although European societies had experienced significant social upheavals and social democracy and the labour movement had emerged as a major force in the late nineteenth century, the politicization of the masses and their ideological affiliations were still at a stage of emergence. At its outbreak, attitudes towards the war were not polarized along now-familiar ideological lines. With the exception of small groups of pacifists and internationalist socialists, most political movements supported their government’s call to arms – albeit with different degree of enthusiasm. Some of the most enthusiastic supporters of the war were motivated by a cultural disposition to react against what they took to be the meaningless or soulless world of capitalist modernity. During the war anti-modernist militants reacted against the growth of social tensions and class conflict and expressed themselves through a synthesis of nationalist and anti-democratic ideology. Others moved in the opposite direction and their rejection of capitalist society gained clarity through the ideologies of the Left.
As we shall see, although the ideologies that crystallized during the course of World War One seemed to acquire a life of their own and shape the conflicts of the twentieth century, they were never entirely autonomous from the cultural tensions that provided the initial impetus for the revolt against the old order. Today, a century later, the old ideologies are conspicuously feeble but cultural conflicts over norms, values, identities, lifestyles are flourishing. The aim of the chapters to follow is to explore the question of why some of the conflicts that influenced the cultural sensibility of 1914 continue to challenge twenty-first-century society.
The spirit of the age
Stefan Zweig, the world-renowned Austrian novelist and playwright and well-known pacifist, lived to see two world wars. When the Great War broke out in 1914, he – along with almost all European intellectuals – supported his nation’s war effort. Later, with a hint of embarrassment, he recalled the sense of excitement and celebration that the news of the impending conflict provoked amongst people. ‘And to be truthful, I must acknowledge that there was a majestic, rapturous, and even seductive something in this first outbreak of the people from which one could escape only with difficulty’, he recalled.⁹ The mood of excitement that swept Zweig off his feet was fuelled by the powerful impulse to forge a sense of belonging in a world where growing numbers of people, especially the young, had become estranged from their community. Capitalist society succeeded in rationalizing everyday life to the point that the domain of values seemed to be dominated by economic calculation alone. Finding a language for expressing the human spirit preoccupied the thought of groups of increasingly influential artists and intellectuals. Not all were touched by this mood of estrangement, but it was widely noted that material security coexisted with spiritual and moral confusion. This dissonance between material and moral encouraged a cultural reaction against the rationalizing imperative of modernity, particularly among the youth. To many young people it seemed as if bourgeois society ‘had lost its spirit’.¹⁰
Capitalist society was relatively successful in offering a measure of economic security to a substantial section of society but could do little to provide people with purpose. Robert Musil’s great novel The Man Without Qualities captured the tension between the façade of bourgeois convention and its aimless inner and moral life. Set in Vienna on the eve of the Great War, it captures the spirit of an age that deprives people of the capacity to endow their experience with purpose or direction. In this moment of moral confusion the drive towards war provided many estranged individuals with the promise that there was something more to life than the banality of their apparently pointless existence. The American political theorist Francis Fukuyama reminds us that, back in 1914, ‘many European publics simply wanted war because they were fed up with the dullness and lack of community in civilian life’.¹¹ At least in part, the unexpected popular enthusiasm for the war can be interpreted as a ‘rebellion’ against what was experienced as the stultifying and alienating conventions of middle-class Europe.¹² Though such revolts would recur after the devastating experience of the Great War – for example, that of the 1960s counter-culture – they would cease to assume such an explicit militaristic form.
In the end Zweig succeeded in breaking away from the militaristic culture that dominated his own nation as well as the rest of Europe. His pacifist convictions and self-conscious anti-nationalist identification with Europe would go against the grain of political developments in the decades to come. By the time the Second World War broke out, Zweig must have felt that the world that he had known and loved before 1914 was lost. Forced out of Europe by the threat of Nazi power, he ended up as an immigrant in Brazil, where he and his wife took their own lives on 22 February 1942. His suicide note was not simply a statement about himself but about a world that had vanished. He wrote of the disappearance of the ‘world of my own language’ and of ‘my spiritual home’. He indicated that there may well be a ‘dawn after the long night’ but he was too ‘impatient’ to carry on with life.¹³ His premonition that a very long night lay ahead intimately meshed with his belief that the Great War had shattered once and for all the pre-existing ‘Golden Age of Security’.
The Golden Age of Security referred to the more than four decades of prosperous peace in pre-1914 Europe. During the years leading up to the Great War, the Golden Age of Security had become the target of criticism by young people and intellectuals disenchanted by its spiritual emptiness. However, by the outbreak of the Second World War many would look upon these decades wistfully as an ‘age of innocence’ and they served as a focus for nostalgia.
In his disturbing Foreword to his remarkable novel The Magic Mountain, the German author Thomas Mann characterizes the outbreak of the Great War as a seminal moment ‘with whose beginning so many things began, whose beginnings, it seems have not yet ceased’.¹⁴ The beginnings that Mann intuited also marked the ending of a world that the cultural historian Modris Eksteins has reluctantly characterized as one dominated by a bourgeois outlook.¹⁵ More specifically, the values, norms, certainties or taken-for-granted assumptions through which the cultural and political elites understood their place in the world appeared to lose its vitality and meaning. The experience of the century to come indicates that what has been lost has been neither regained nor replaced. Jacques Barzun wrote in his magisterial review of the history of Western cultural life that the Great War was unlike any of its eighteenth- or nineteenth-century predecessors because those ‘did not threaten civilization or close an era’.¹⁶
Many of those who lived through the Great War knew that this conflict had created more problems than it solved. ‘It was not long after the Great War that far-seeing observers predicted the likelihood of another and it became plain that western civilization had brought itself into a condition from which full recovery was unlikely’, observed Barzun.¹⁷ It was evident to many that the ‘War to End All Wars’ had not only eclipsed all others with its scale of destruction but marked the beginning of ominous conflicts to come.
Numerous historians have rightly drawn attention to a chain of events that leads directly from the First to the Second World War. Others have posited the Cold War as the Third or Final Act in the drama. However the conflicts and issues left unresolved by the Great War were not settled with the fall of the Berlin Wall. Why? Because World War One was not simply a struggle over territory or ideology. It also served as a catalyst for eroding the prevailing system of meaning and helped intensify disputes over norms and values. That is why the beginning of what is currently often termed as the Culture War can also be situated at some time around August 1914. At that time culture became politicized through the construction of patriotic narratives that linked a nation’s geopolitical ambitions to a way of life.
Today patriotism enjoys little cultural valuation in Western societies. It is frequently ridiculed as an outdated sentiment that periodically takes possession of the easily manipulated urban crowds. In contrast to 1914, very few self-respecting intellectuals would be caught waving their national flag. Instead of the flag, competing groups flaunt their identity and instead of celebrating their way of life, they acclaim their lifestyle.
Writing in the 1920s, the French man of letters Julian Benda sought to explain why intellectuals throughout Europe became spineless apologists for crude nationalism and the war effort. He came to the conclusion that it was through the mobilization of the resources of culture that patriotism gained clarity and force. He observed perceptively that ‘patriotism today is the assertion of one form of mind against other forms of mind’. He stated that national tensions were often represented as conflicts among rival cultures: ‘every nation now hugs itself and sets itself up against all other nations as superior in language, art, literature, philosophy, civilization, culture
.’¹⁸ This insight is confirmed by other studies of this subject. ‘Widespread support for the war among the learned was grounded on a general European understanding that the conflict was ultimately a war of cultures
’, notes one study of this subject.¹⁹
A war of cultures may be conducted between societies and nations as claimed by Samuel Huntington, the author of Clashes of Civilisation.²⁰ However, as is evident in the twenty-first century, cultural conflicts can also exacerbate domestic disputes and divide groups within the same community. The contestation of cultural authority has been a recurrent theme, but invariably it assumes new and different forms. The durability of this conflict was well expressed by the historian Henry May in his study of this subject. Writing in 1959 on the eve of the emergence of the 1960s counter-culture, the historian Henry May argues that some time around the years 1912–17 the United States experienced a cultural revolution. The subtitle of his book The End of American Innocence is A Study of the First Years of our Time, 1912–1917.²¹ What this subtitle succeeds in capturing is a significant historical turning point when divisive cultural conflicts would often unsettle Western societies.
Why wars?
Wars permeate the political culture of the past century. Time and again the major global conflicts serve as a point of reference in the calculation of policy-makers. They are not just perceived as the key milestones of the twentieth century but also of the twenty-first. Allusions to the wars of the past continue be made by policy-makers and commentators attempting to clarify the issues at stake in the series of conflicts that has broken out in the wake of the destruction of the World Trade Center.
Wars have an impact on how people think and during the past century its threat had a palpable bearing on political and intellectual life in Western societies. This was the case particularly between 1930 and 1960. Raymond Aron, in his 1955 Cold War classic The Opium of the Intellectuals, alluded to this point when he stated that:
One cannot live through the Thirty Years’ War or the Peloponnesian War or, least of all the two world wars of 1914 and 1939, without asking oneself about their causes and consequences. One seeks, in a slightly disingenuous way to give them a meaning – not in the positive sense of establishing the main facts in order to understand what in fact happened, but a meaning that will provide an excuse for all the accumulated horrors.²²
Wars also call into question previously accepted meanings of concepts that guide public life. And that legacy has retained its significance to this time.
The conflicts explored in this book are, in part, a consequence of the unresolved issues and questions unleashed through the experience of the First World War. Until the horrors of World War Two overwhelmed the historical imagination, the conflict of 1914–18 was frequently referred to as the Great War. We shall frequently use this appellation through this book in order to highlight its distinct role as the point of departure for a chain of events that continue to influence the way we interpret our world.
Our historical memory of the Great War has as its focus the millions of wasted lives lost in the muddy trenches of European battlefields. The focus of this study is not on the military dimensions of the Great War but on its impact on the way we think about cultural and political life. Those mobilized into military service, as well as their peers and families at home, reacted in a variety of different ways to the war. Some could not let go of the sense of exhilaration and camaraderie that they experienced in the midst of fighting. Others were traumatized and devastated by the brutality and inhumanity of the conflict. These different responses coexisted with a diffuse sensibility of cultural disenchantment with the promise of European and Western civilization. This mood of disappointment with the legacy of the past exposed the prevailing political order to the scrutiny of millions.
The political upheavals precipitated by this conflict called into question the norms and values associated with the ideals of freedom and democracy. Indeed, for a time during the interwar years it looked as if liberal democracy would be overwhelmed by the authoritarian temper of those times. As we argue, despite the passage of a century the disturbing questions raised during the Great War are still in search of a satisfactory answer.
The Great War was both preceded and followed by what the Hungarian sociologist Karl Mannheim has called a crisis of valuation. Mannheim’s concept of a crisis of valuation refers to the decomposition of a normative consensus about the principles that guide communities. At times this crisis was obscured by periods of artificial unity forged through war and social conflicts and through the mass mobilization achieved by radical ideological movements. However, since the Cold War, the disappearance of a normative consensus has been difficult to ignore. Questions that could be ignored in the past can no longer be evaded. That’s one compelling reason for writing this book.
Notes
1 Taylor (1966) p.20.
2 Cited in Hynes (1991) p.3.
3 Hynes (1991) p.3.
4 Neumann (1946) p.28.
5 Sternhell (2010) p.25.
6 The argument that Luther was Hitler’s spiritual ancestor is put forward by Wiener (1945).
7 Sternhell (2010) p.407.
8 As argued by Strenhell (2010) p.15.
9 Zweig (1953) p.223.
10 Neumann (1946) p.34.
11 Fukuyama (1992) p.331.
12 See pp.331–2.
13 Zweig (1953) p.437.
14 Mann (2005) p.xxxv.
15 Eksteins (1989) p.185.
16 Barzun (2000) p.683.
17 Barzun (2000) p.712.
18 Benda (1959) p.14.
19 Pietila (2011) p.100.
20 See discussion on Huntington’s views on http://www.pewtrusts.org/news_room_detail.aspx?id=24374
21 May (1959).
22 Aron (1957) p.192.
1
The Great War – the beginning of beginning
It is widely argued that ideas and ideologies have made a significant contribution to the outbreak of modern wars. At various moments nationalism, imperialism, communism, fascism and even liberalism have been portrayed as significant influences on the conduct of ideologically driven wars. That ideologies and ideas may play a significant role in the conduct of warfare is beyond doubt. But what is also significant is that wars do not leave the ideas that promoted the outbreak of military conflict untouched. The very experience of a war, its impact on the military and civilian population and on the national psyche, influences and sometimes alters the way societies think about the fundamental issues confronting them. Shifts in the global balance of power sometimes strengthen and sometimes erode the legitimacy and workings of national institutions. The dramatic displacement of the prevailing institutional equilibrium forces society to question existing traditions and assumptions. The exhaustion of the dominant cultural norms can have a significant impact on the way that people think and interpret their place in the world. How the Great War and the conflicts it bred changed the way we think is the principal subject of this book.
The economic costs of this war were so enormous that it would take decades before financial stability would be regained. All the major participants bore a heavy burden of financial debt which significantly undermined the political stability of European nations. The victorious powers demanded punitive reparations from their opponents, thus fuelling bitter resentment amongst the defeated. The Versailles Treaty created a world of disputed borders and which fanned the flames of resentment and revenge. The question it raised was ‘not if but when’ the next global conflict would erupt. Marshal Foch of France reportedly reacted to the Versailles Treaty by exclaiming: ‘This is not peace. It is an armistice for twenty years.’¹
Marshal Foch was on the right track, though peace took far longer than twenty years to achieve. The German political theorist Sigmund Neumann characterized the period between 1914 and 1946 as a second Thirty Years’ War.² As a refugee from Nazi Germany he was desperately hoping that the Second World War would lead to a durable peace. His appellation of the second Thirty Years’ War proved to be an optimistic one. The ease with which the hopes for peace were engulfed by the Cold War indicated that war – albeit in a different form – had become integral to the workings of modern societies.
It is generally acknowledged that the First World War represents ‘the great dividing line of European society and politics’.³ By the time that exhaustion on the battlefield led to the signing of the armistice on 11 November 1918 the pre-war social and political order that prevailed in Europe had all but disintegrated. The overthrow of Czarism in Russia and the abdication of Kaiser Wilhelm II were the most dramatic manifestations of the end of the old political order. This was a war that directly caused the collapse of the four great empires – the Ottoman, Austrian, German, Russian – that played important roles in global affairs in the nineteenth century. ‘All changed, changed utterly’, wrote the poet W. B. Yeats in reference to the 1916 Easter Rebellion. And all changed utterly throughout the West as well. Moreover, as I note elsewhere, it also unleashed a chain of events that led to the unravelling and fall of Western empires in Africa and Asia.⁴
The old empires and political orders were not the only casualties of the Great War. Arguably this conflict called into question many of the most fundamental assumptions and ideals of nineteenth-century Western societies. Until the outbreak of this war, belief in values such as national and racial superiority, the right of higher civilizations to dominate their inferiors, the civilizing mission of Christianity and of imperialism and the legitimacy of territorial expansion exercised great influence in Western cultural life. Such sentiments were widespread not only in autocratic societies such as Russia but also in more liberal nations such as Britain, France and the United States. As one observer noted, these sentiments ‘played no small role in causing the Great War’.⁵ Although some these ideals survived the war, they lost much of their intellectual appeal and cultural force. That the West lost confidence in itself was a direct consequences of the war. As Francis Fukuyama remarked, the ‘First World War was a critical event in the undermining of Europe’s self-confidence’.⁶ Or as Jacques Barzun observed, ‘the blow that hurled the modern world on its course of self-destruction was the Great War of 1914–18’.⁷
As one prescient review of the changing fortunes of political ideas in the twentieth century stated, ‘the First World War put into question every single institutional arrangement and every single political idea’ on