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The Archaeology of War

The History of Violence between the 20th and 21st Centuries

Christian Wevelsiep author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Anthem Press

Publishing:11th Mar '25

£25.00

This title is due to be published on 11th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This paperback is available in another edition too:

The Archaeology of War cover

Analyses the history of violence in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and traces the many situations, images, motifs and sources for this experience of unbounded violence that characterizes our times. 

The 20th century holds many titles that emphasise the extraordinary. It was a century of totalitarianism, but also one of betrayal, an age of extremes and the incomprehensible. Betrayed, that is, at the mercy of unrestrained violence, were not only the people themselves but also, as it were, the idea of the human being. For up to a certain point, one could weigh oneself in an unfounded security of an inner connection between people. As is well known, such certainties were knocked out of hand in that century.

Many situations, many images, motifs and sources can be named for this experience of unbounded violence, which now, at the beginning of the 21st century, requires new forms of transmission. In an era flooded with images, however, attention is more difficult. One has to embark on a search for traces, not because the sources are lacking, but because the form of inscription in history is problematic. This search for clues leads directly to the present monograph.

“How deep do we have to look into history to decipher the riddle of violence? Author Christian Wevelsiep addresses this question in The Archaeology of War. It is a writing of the highest topicality, for which no proof is needed, and at the same time a draft with normative urgency. How can we control the violence that extends across all epochs? Probably only by clarifying the psychological and social conditions under which we encounter each other” — Lutz Ellrich, University of Cologne, Institute for Media Culture, Germany.

ISBN: 9781839994739

Dimensions: 229mm x 153mm x 21mm

Weight: 454g

214 pages