hey Angel
oh man, i'm trying to read AJP Taylor and it is SO boring! i got some sort of summary from just searching google:
A. J. P. Taylor wrote his book Origins of the Second World War in 1961
argued war not unique
not caused by rival ideologies of fascism and communism and liberalism
nor "good" great ideals vs. "bad" evil Hitler
nor any blueprint for world conquest by Hitler
rather, it was blunders, opportunism, traditional balance of power
"human blunders shape history more than human wickedness"
Hitler was a "traditional European statesman" seeking to restore Germany
he "simply leaned on the door hoping to gain entrance and the whole house fell in"
Hitler's anti-Semitism not unique - took advantage of mood throughout Europe
Germany was the dynamic element in European politics since 1870s
growing, expanding since Bismarck
Article 231 was correct to blame Germany for WWI
Hitler's revanchism had much support in Germany
Hitler & Mussolini responded to actions of others - no one in control, no plot
Poland from ILN 1939/05/06
France and England pursued own national interests
Benes in Czech lured Sudeten Germans, had "canker in her heart"
Poland weak, corrupt, elitist - an artificial creation of the Big 4
U.S. totally isolationistic - abrogated responsibility of Article 10
Stalin sought security from invasion - alliance with France
Taylor thesis is narrow and deterministic
2nd war inevitably caused by 1st war
crisis of 1939 was simply the "war for Danzig" to East Prussia
German nationalism was the driving force - "Anschluss"
Taylor neglected variety of causes
economic, ideological, multinational
harsh reparations of Articles 232-235, Great Depression, trade imbalance
real threat of spread of communism east and west
multinational failure to make League of Nations work
Alan John Percivale Taylor was born March 25, 1906, Birkdale, Lancashire, and died Sept. 7, 1990, in London. He is regarded as one of the most important British historians of the 20th century.
"Taylor attended Oriel College, Oxford, graduating with first-class honours in 1927. In 1931 he began writing reviews and essays for the Manchester Guardian (later The Guardian). He continued his studies in history, and in 1934 his first book, The Italian Problem in European Diplomacy 1847-1849, was published. A second book on diplomacy, Germany's First Bid for Colonies 1884-1885: A Move in Bismarck's European Policy, appeared in 1938. Taylor was a tutor in modern history at Magdalen College, Oxford, from 1938 to 1963 and a research fellow there until 1976. He became a panel member of a BBC-TV news analysis program in 1950 and made regular television appearances thereafter. He was also popular as a journalist and lecturer. Though often sparking controversy with his unorthodox views, Taylor nonetheless maintained high standards of scholarship. Among his more than 30 publications are The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848-1918 (1954; published as volume 1 of The Oxford History of Modern Europe) and English History 1914-1945 (1965). His most widely read and controversial book was The Origins of the Second World War (1961), in which he maintained that the war erupted because Great Britain and France vacillated between policies of appeasement and resistance toward Adolf Hitler. Taylor's autobiography, A Personal History, was published in 1983." (from EB)
Taylor has been used by the Holocaust revisionists, such as IHR but he was never this kind of revisionist, and never denied the reality of the Holocaust. He at one time praised the scholarship of the notorious David Irving, but he never endorsed the bogus Hitler Diaries or Irving's anti-Holocaust arguments. Taylor practiced a legitimate revisionism that is found in every field of history. Similar revisionists included Daniel J. Goldhagen who has argued that a deep-rooted anti-Semitism in Germany caused the Holocaust, not just Hitler and the Nazi party. Herbert Bix has challenged the traditional interpretation of Hirohito as a passive, remote figure-head, and has instead argued that the emperor was an active supporter of war policies.
References:
Bix, Herbert P. Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan. New York: HarperCollins, 2000
Goldhagen, Daniel J. Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust. NY: Knopf, 1996.
Taylor, A. J. P. The Origins of the Second World War. Middlesex: Penguin Books,1961.
if that helps anyone. its certainly easier than reading that boring boring book. i do ancient and modern and i love both, but this case study is driving me insane. any more ideas anyone?