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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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Into the Intro: The Great War at Sea

Submarine warfare was crucial to Allied victory in World War I. In this excerpt from The Great War at Sea, Lawrence Sondhaus unveils the Great War beyond the trenches.

11 Aug 2014

Preserving World War I in Words

Rosalind Grooms pulls An Outline History of the Great War out of the Press Archive and tells the fascinating story behind it.

Rosalind Grooms | 8 Aug 2014

Don’t Miss Your Chance to Shoot the Moon

It’s not too late to submit! Hurry—our summer astrophotography contest closes in three weeks. You could win $125 worth of Cambridge astronomy books of your choice. Whether you’re an experienced...

7 Aug 2014

Recipes from the Homefront

"Food Will Win the War!" the U.S. Food Administration proclaimed. Instructing the folks at home to cut back on their wheat and meat intake meant more food to fuel the soldiers overseas. But how to make it through those Meatless Tuesdays and Wheatless Wednesdays before 1920? Take a stab at these recipes for the experience of WWI at home.

6 Aug 2014

The Race Laws After 75 Years

Michael A. Livingston, the author of The Fascists and the Jews of Italy, draws parallels between Mussolini's Italian Race Laws and sentiment about immigration through the ages—from the Jim Crow American South to today's Europe.

Michael A. Livingston | 5 Aug 2014

Into the Intro: Behind the Front

If you enjoyed Craig Gibson's post last Monday on researching life in the trenches in WWI, take a look at the introduction to his book, Behind the Front, and get the full story about Major Arthur Murray Jarvis.

Craig Gibson | 4 Aug 2014

War Short of War

The author of The United States, Italy and the Origins of Cold War: Waging Political Warfare discusses how the case of Italy in the early years of the cold war helped set the stage for over half a century of U.S. interventions abroad.

1 Aug 2014

Genre and Periodization in the History of European Political Thought

Tyler Lange, the author of The First French Reformation, traces European political thought through the 15th to 17th centuries in search of continuity.

Tyler Lange | 31 Jul 2014

One Hundred Years Since the War

In this excerpt from his new book July Crisis, T.G. Otte reflects on the year 1914 as the beginning of the greatest war in world history. The events in Europe that July catapulted nations around the globe into a years-long conflict that continues to define national identity, international relations, and global culture.

30 Jul 2014

How Slavery Really Shaped the Civil War

Robert E. May, the author of Slavery, Race, and Conquest in the Tropics, sat down with us to discuss the complex causes of the Civil War, including the little-studied debate between Abraham Lincoln and...

29 Jul 2014

The Western Front Revisited

Craig Gibson, the author of Behind the Front, describes the arduous process of historical research and takes us inside an unexpected breakthrough.

Craig Gibson | 28 Jul 2014

Are Social Media Platforms Getting Too Close to the Creepy Line?

David A. Schweidel, the co-author of Social Media Intelligence, outlines the terms of service we agree to when we search in Google, log in to Facebook, and Tweet, and how today's social media innovators may be invading our privacy and learning more about us than we'd like.

David A. Schweidel | 25 Jul 2014