ON THIS PAGE:
|
Clausewitz's On
War (Books That Changed the World). By Hew Strachan (Atlantic
Monthly Press, 2006). ISBN: 0871139561. Strachan, one of the worlds
foremost military historians, offers some answers to many of the
problems posed by Clausewitz's writings. He explains how and why
On War was written, elucidates what Clausewitz meant, and
offers insight into the impact it has had on conflict, and evaluates
its continued significance in our world today.
|

There's a new book
on Clausewitz coming from
Jon T. Sumida,
Decoding Clausewitz: A New Approach to On War.
We'll keep you posted. Here is the Abstract.
|

NOW AVAILABLE!
from Oxford
University Press
and in Oxford
Scholarship OnLine
Clausewitz's Puzzle: The
Political Theory of War. By Andreas Herberg-Rothe
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007). ISBN:
0199202699. Estimated publication
date: April 2007. See reviews
in English and German of the German
edition. See
the publication
announcement from OUP.
And
see this discussion
on Sonshi.com.
|
Clausewitz in the Twenty-First Century.
Edited by Hew Strachan and Andreas Herberg-Rothe (Oxford University
Press, September 2007). ISBN: 199232024.
This is the proceedings of the
March 2005 Oxford University
conference on Clausewitz
in the 21st Century. See discussion
by Andreas Herberg-Rothe and Tony Echevarria. |
|
Clausewitz and Contemporary War.
By Antulio J. Echevarria (Oxford University Press, 2007). ISBN:
0199231915. Tony Echevarria lays out Clausewitz's methodology and
uses that as a basis for understanding his contributions. He addresses
Clausewitz's theories concerning the nature of war, the relationship
between war and politics, the major principles of strategy he examined,
and their relationship to current debates over the nature of contemporary
conflict. |
|
|
|
RECENT WORKS
that keep Clausewitz studies on the cutting
edge of strategic thinking
|
|
Rethinking
the
Nature of War

|
|
On War (Oxford World's Classics).
ISBN: 0192807161 -- ISBN-13: 9780192807168. This abridgement, editited
by Beatrice Heuser, uses the current standard translation, the one
by Michael Howard and Peter Paret (1976/84). [Our link
is to the Oxford University Press listing, as Amazon has the various
translations and editions of On War hopelessly screwed up--e.g.,
their link to Heuser's table of contents goes to the abysmal
Penguin edition misconceived by biologist Anatol Rapoport in
1968.]
|
Rethinking the Nature of Modern War: Clausewitz
and His Critics Revisited. Jan Angstrom and Isabelle Duyvesteyn
, eds. (London: Frank Cass, 2004) ISBN: 0415354625. 0415354625.
Details.
Have globalization, ethnic conflict, and global insurgency fundamentally
changed the nature of war? These essays scrutinize both Clausewitz's
original arguments and those of his critics. Originally published
in Stockholm by the Swedish National Defence College, 2003.
|
Clausewitz
and the State, 2nd edition. By Peter Paret.
The new edition of this classic 1976 work includes a preface that
allows Paret to recount the past thirty years of discussion on Clausewitz
and respond to critics. A companion volume to Clausewitz's On War,
this book is indispensable to anyone interested in Clausewitz, his
theories, and their proper historical context. ISBN: 0691131309. |
|
|
|
|
| Clausewitz
on Strategy: Inspiration and Insight from a Master Strategist.
Clausewitz for CEOs. Learn
details. (Wiley, 2001) ISBN: 0471415138. Rejecting
the commonplace but simplistic--indeed, fundamentally erroneous--notion
that "business is war," The Boston
Consulting Group's Strategy
Institute nonetheless offers Clausewitz's framework for strategists'
self-education as a way to train the business leader's thinking. |
|
After
Clausewitz: German Military Thinkers before the Great War. By
Antulio J. Echevarria II (University Press of Kansas, 2000).
ISBN: 0700610715. The writings of Carl von Clausewitz loom so large
in the annals of military theory that they obscure the substantial
contributions of those German thinkers who came after him. Although
none of those thinkers approached Clausewitz’s stature, they were
nonetheless theorists of considerable vision. It was a
failure of application more than the theories themselves that were
responsible for the ruinous slaughter of World War I. |
|
|
|
|
| Clausewitz
and Chaos: Friction in War and Military Policy. By Stephen
J. Cimbala (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2001).
ISBN: 0275969517. Stephen Cimbala is Distinguished Professor of Political
Science at Penn State University. He argues that failure and folly
are inevitable in war and in security policy related to war. Technology
cannot rescue flawed policy or strategy. In his review of U.S. military
strategy, Cimbala points to the possibility that excessive faith in
technology may lead American strategy into a cul-de-sac. |
Clausewitz:
A Very Short Introduction. By Michael Howard (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2002). ISBN: 0192802577. Michael Howard explains
Clausewitz's ideas in terms both of his experiences as a professional
soldier in the Napoleonic Wars, and of the intellectual background
of his time. " [A] delightful introduction to the paradoxes and insights
of this passionate rationalist."--London Review of Books |
Reading
Clausewitz. By Beatrice Heuser. Paperback
- 320 pages (Pimlico, 2002) ISBN: 071266484X. This
is a comprehensive study on how to read Clausewitz and how others
have read him - from the military commanders in World War One through
Lenin and Mao Zedung to strategists in the nuclear age. Designed for
Staff College students. See REVIEW. |
.
|
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED BOOKS NOT
BY OR ABOUT CLAUSEWITZ
|
|
William H. McNeil, The Pursuit
of Power: Technology, Armed Force and Society Since A.D. 1000
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982). A
comprehensive analysis of the development of military power over
the past thousand years by a famed world historian. ISBN: 0226561585
|
Lynn Margulis and Dorion
Sagan, Acquiring Genomes: A Theory of the Origins of Species (Basic
Books, 2002). Purely a book on biology,
this approach to the sources of evolutionary--and thus strategic--innovation
should affect your understanding of strategy in the human domain.
ISBN 0465043925 (Paperback.). See Hardcover.
|
Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel: The
Fates of Human Societies (W.W. Norton: 1999).
Geographer Diamond asks why the civilizations of Eurasia, esp.
the West, have such complex material civilizations, providing
a rich, multi-factor analysis--a valuable contrast to V.D. Hanson's
interesting work on the cultural origins of Western military superiority.
ISBN: 0393317552
|
Victor Davis Hanson, Carnage and Culture:
Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power (Doubleday:
2001). This is a seriously flawed but
also very interesting study of the character of Western warfare.
The author is a classicist and contemporary political polemicist.
ISBN: 0385720386
|
|
Gary A. Klein, Sources of Power: How People
Make Decisions (MIT Press, 1997).
Klein, a cognitive psychologist, spent a decade watching fire-fighters,
critical care nurses, pilots, nuclear power plant operators, battle
planners, chess masters, and others making split-second decisions
on the job, acting under such real-life constraints as time pressure,
high stakes, personal responsibility, and shifting conditions.
This book is a clear and engaging account of his findings, and
it offers historians and military theorists a more realistic model
for understanding the behavior of military and political decisionmakers
than many have followed in the past. ISBN: 0262611465
|
John A. Lynn, Battle: A History of Combat
and Culture (Westview, 2003). Lynn
is an expert on seventeenth- and eighteenth-century warfare, esp.
French, but here he has written a sweeping look at the cultural
aspects of warfare in contexts ranging from classical Greece and
India to medieval and modern Europe, Japan, and Egypt. More important,
he has done so without succumbing to the "war & culture" crowd's
tendency towards single-factor analysis, and his discussion of
Clausewitz--despite some over-reliance on Azar Gat--is sensible
and insightful. ISBN: 0813333725
|
Mitchell M. Waldrop, Complexity:
The Emerging Science At The Edge Of Order And Chaos (Simon
& Schuster, 1992). Waldrop tells
us the historical development of the birthing ground of Complexity
science, the Santa Fe Institute. However, his main subject is
complexity science itself and its implications. As one reviewer
puts it, "He not only tells you what Complexity IS, but WHY you
should care about it." As with James Gleick's Chaos, this
is must reading for any 21st-century Clausewitzian wannabe. (See
Alan D. Beyerchen's
essay on the connection.) ISBN: 0671872346
|
James Gleick, Chaos: Making a New Science
(New York: Viking, 1987). In this now-classic
work, Gleick, formerly a science writer for the New York Times,
depicts the beginnings of Chaos theory, which draws on the seemingly
random patterns that characterize many natural phenomena. It explains
the thought processes and investigative techniques of Chaos scientists,
illustrating concepts like Julia sets, Lorenz attractors, and
the Mandelbrot Set with sketches, photographs, and wonderful
descriptive prose. Must reading for any Clausewitzian. (See Alan
D. Beyerchen's essay on the connection.) ISBN: 0140092501
|
|
Bruce D. Porter, War and the Rise of the
State: The Military Foundations of Modern Politics (New York:
The Free Press, 1994). Neither a 'profoundly
original book' nor an attack on the state (both characterizations
made by other reviewers), this is an intelligent and incisive
investigation of the simple truth--long known to sophisticated
military and political historians but seemingly a revelation to
many modern academics--that the origin of the modern state and
of modern politics lies in the overwhelming need for societies
to exercise some control over the endemic internal and external
violence that is inherent in human nature. ISBN: 0743237781.
|
Robert Drews, The End of the Bronze Age:
Changes in Warfare and the Catastrophe ca. 1200 B.C. (Princeton
University Press, 1993). A fascinating
exploration of a major military mystery by (Johns Hopkins, 1960).
ISBN: 0691025916
|
Lawrence Keeley, War Before Civilization:
The Myth of the Peaceful Savage (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1994). Simply one of the best
books we've read in years. Unlike the faux-anthropological nonsense
published in recent years by academic historians, it gives us
a genuine look at the anthropology of war--the author is an actual
anthropologist and archaeologist. Looking at warfare among pre-state,
pre-literate peoples from the stone age to the present day,
Keeley convincingly demonstrates that prehistoric warfare was
more deadly, more frequent, and more ruthless than modern war.
ISBN: 0195119126.
|
John
Lewis Gaddis, The Landscape of History: How Historians Map
the Past (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004).
Is history a science? Gaddis answers these and
other questions in this short, witty, searching look at the historian's
craft. Historians combine the techniques of artists, geologists,
paleontologists, and evolutionary biologists, paralleling in intriguing
ways the "new sciences" of chaos and complexity, but
not the social sciences, where the pursuit of independent variables
functioning within static systems seems divorced from the world
as we know it. ISBN: 0195171578
|
|
Clausewitzian "Trinity" demonstration device
The "Trinity"
is a key concept in Clausewitzian theory, which Clausewitz illustrated
by referring to this scientific device. You can obtain the ROMP
(Randomly Oscillating Magnetic Pendulum) from science toy stores
for about $15. Here's a link to the Edmund
Scientifics on-line ad for the device.
|
|
MORE
BOOKS BY AND ABOUT CLAUSEWITZ
|
|
|

Historical
and Political Writings
|
Buy the standard
English translation of Clausewitz's On War, by Michael Howard
and Peter Paret (1976/84)
HARDCOVER. ISBN:
0691056579 -- See
SOFTCOVER edition,
ISBN: 0691018545. |
On War,
by Carl von Clausewitz, trans. Michael Howard and Peter Paret (1976/84).
ISBN: 0679420436.
This is the Everyman's
Library edition. |
Historical
and Political Writings, by Carl von Clausewitz, trans. Peter
Paret and Daniel Moran (Princeton, 1992). ISBN:
0691031924. |
|
|
* FULL
TEXT AVAILABLE ON-LINE
|
|
| The Campaign
of 1812 in Russia, by Carl von Clausewitz, with an introduction
by Sir Michael Howard (Da Capo, 1995). ISBN:
0306806509. |
Clausewitz
in English: The Reception of Clausewitz in Britain and America,
by Christopher Bassford (Oxford, 1994).
ISBN: 0195083830. Amazon.co.uk
listing. |
Clausewitz
and the State: The Man, His Theories, and His Times, by Peter
Paret (Princeton, 1976). ISBN: 069100806X.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Azar Gat, The Development of
Military Thought - The Nineteenth Century (Oxford: The Clarendon
Press, 1992). This is a useful and important
book, though Gat is an uncommonly pompous academic and tends to
take his own insights a little too seriously. ISBN: 0198202466.
|
Azar Gat, The Origins of Military
Thought: From the Enlightenment to the Cold War (Oxford University
Press, 2001). Gat continues both to have
some good ideas and to take all of his own ideas rather
more seriously than the evidence (or the nature of reality) can
support. ISBN: 0199247625.
|
Jehuda L. Wallach, The Dogma
of the Battle of Annihilation: The Theories of Clausewitz and
Schlieffen and Their Impact on the German Conduct of Two World
Wars (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1986).
ISBN: 0313244383.
|
|
|
|
|
Modern Strategy, by Colin Gray
(Oxford, 1999). Hardcover
ISBN:
0198280300. Softcover ISBN:
0198782519. Gray is considered by many to be the foremost
Clausewitzian writer on strategic affairs today.
|
Masters of War: Classical Strategic
Thought, by Michael Handel (Cass,).
ISBN: 0714681326.
|
The Book of War.
(The Modern Library, February 2000).
Clausewitz and Sun Tzu in one book. With an interesting introduction
by Ralph Peters. ISBN: 0375754776.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On Clausewitz: A Study of
Military and Political Ideas, by Hugh Smith. (Palgrave Macmillan,
2005). 272 pages. ISBN: 1403935874.
|
Roger Parkinson. Clausewitz:
A Biography. New York: Stein and Day, 1971. Reissued 2002.
This book is poorly regarded by many, but it does have some strengths
in covering Clausewitz's personal life and experiences.
Softcover ISBN: 0815412339.
|
Carl von Clausewitz. War,
Politics, and Power. Selections from On War, and
"I Believe and Profess." Translated and edited by
Edward M. Collins (COL, USAF), (Chicago: Henry
Regnery Company, 1962). Softcover,
209pp. ISBN: 0895264013.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Carl Von Clausewitz, On War
(8 Cassettes), (probably 1873 Graham
edition), Read by Nadia May. Format: Audiotape.
Pub. Date: December 1990. Edition
Description "Unabridged." That's Doubtful. ISBN: 0786101946.
|
Carl von Clausewitz, The Campaign
of 1812 in Russia.
Trans. anonymous [Francis Egerton, Lord Ellesmere].
London: J. Murray, 1843. Foreword by Gerard Chaliand. This reprint
publication 1997.
Softcover, 148pp. ISBN: 0962871583.
|
Carl von Clausewitz, The Campaign
of 1812 in Russia. Trans. anonymous [Francis Egerton, Lord
Ellesmere]. London: J. Murray, 1843. Hardcover, 260pp. Publisher:
Stackpole Books. This reprint publication 1992.
ISBN: 1853671142.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Michael Howard. Clausewitz.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983. Textbook
Paperback, 79th ed., 79pp. ISBN: 0192876074.
|
Cimbala, Stephen. Clausewitz
and Escalation: Classical Perspectives on Nuclear Strategy.
London: Frank Cass, 1991. Hardcover,
218pp. ISBN: 0714634204.
|
Carl von Clausewitz, Principles
of War. This apears to be a reprint of the 1942 Hans
Gatzke translation. Dover Books. ISBN: 0486427994.
This text is on-line HERE.
|
|
|
BUY
[NOT from Amazon.co.uk]
|
|
| Handel, Michael
I., ed. Clausewitz and Modern Strategy. London: Frank Cass,
1986. Hardcover, 324pp. ISBN:
0714632945. |
The Essential
Clausewitz: Selections from On War, by Carl von Clausewitz,
edited by Joseph I. Greene. This is a Dover reprint of the version
published by Cassell and Company, London, 1945. |
NOT
Recommended. Here's
why.
Carl von Clausewitz. On War. Edited and abridged
by Anatol Rapoport. Paperback, 461pp. Publisher:
Viking Penguin, 1968; based on the 1873 Graham translation; includes
elements of 1908 F.N. Maude edition). ISBN:
0140444270. |
|
Audio MP.3's of the first four
books in Clausewitz's ON WAR
(the Graham translation)
See Bibliographies
of relevant works in English, French, German, Japanese, Spanish/Portuguese,
and other languages
E-book
versions of On War (apparently only Books I-IV,
of eight).
(Full 8-book text on-line HERE)
Another E-Book version
of On War
(MicroSoft Reader format)
Item# B0000523UU
Actually, this one seems to have disappeared.
But we like the graphic, so
we're retaining it for display.
|
TERMS
AMAZON.CO.UK is an on-line bookstore with an amazingly
comprehensive booklist. You can do your shopping and browsing on-line,
and you can even contribute reviews of books (or comments on books you've
written yourself). You can order with a credit card via secure links.
AMAZON.CO.UK provides detailed information as to book prices, availability,
shipping dates, etc., and will remain in close e-mail contact with you
concerning your order. In short, it's a fast, convenient, informative,
and economical service.
These links to the AMAZON.CO.UK bookstore are provided
for the reader's convenience only. All transactions are exclusively
between the buyer and AMAZON.CO.UK.
See
bibliographies of Clausewitz-related works in English, German,
French, Japanese, Spanish/Portuguese, and other languages
Contact
Clausewitz.com
Return
to Clausewitz Homepage
|