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Frontline and Factory Roy MacLeod

Frontline and Factory By Roy MacLeod

Frontline and Factory by Roy MacLeod


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Summary

The Great War, as it came to be known, was not the first industrial war, but it was the first to involve all the major industrial nations of the world.

Frontline and Factory Summary

Frontline and Factory: Comparative Perspectives on the Chemical Industry at War, 1914-1924 by Roy MacLeod

It has been said that history is a debate between the present and the past about the future. Nowhere are these lines drawn more significantly than in the study of science and war. And nowhere is the discourse more relevant, than in the study of science and technology as foundations and multipliers of military power. This book is concerned with one particularly seminal aspect of this development the history of chemical munitions during and immediately after the First World War. The Great War, as it came to be known, was not the first industrial war, but it was the first to involve all the major industrial nations of the world. Within four years, the world witnessed unprecedented feats of industrial development, many of which drew upon and extended pre-war reservoirs of scientific and technological knowledge. The experience comes down to us as a conjuncture of scientific, economic, political and, ultimately, military departures, which by their nature involved new ways of meeting crises, and eventually new forms of critical thinking. That these new forms emerged only gradually and unexpectedly is not to underestimate their capacity to endure, or to minimize their relevance. From the Great War came patterns, assumptions, and practices which were to make an indelible mark on science and technology for the rest of the twentieth century and beyond.

Table of Contents

Technological Mobilization and Munitions Production: Comparative Perspectives on Germany and Austria.- Mobilization and Industrial Policy: Chemicals and Pharmaceuticals In The French War Effort.- First World War Explosives Manufacture: The British Experience.- Transforming a Village into an Industrial Town: The Royal Prussian Powder Plant in Kirchmoser (Brandenburg).- Wartime Chemistry in Italy: Industry, the Military, and the Professors.- Munitions, the Military, and Chemistry in Russia.- Technical Expertise and U.S. Mobilization, 191718: High Explosives and War Gases.- Operating on Several Fronts: The Trans-National Activities of Royal Dutch/Shell, 19141918.- Kuhlmann at War, 19141924.- Organizing for Total War: DuPont and Smokeless Powder in World War I.- Science and the Military: The Kaiser Wilhelm Foundation for Military-Technical Science.- Managing Chemical Expertise: The Laboratories of the French Artillery and the Service des Poudres.- The War the Victors Lost: The Dilemmas of Chemical Disarmament, 19191926.

Additional information

NPB9781402054891
9781402054891
1402054890
Frontline and Factory: Comparative Perspectives on the Chemical Industry at War, 1914-1924 by Roy MacLeod
New
Hardback
Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
2007-02-28
279
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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