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Michael P.M. Fox et al., eds., " Framing the First World War: How Divergent Views Shaped a Global Conflict" (UP of Kansas, 2025)

Jan 21, 2026
Dr. Aimée Fox, a historian with expertise in military organizations, joins fellow scholars Dr. David G. Morgan-Owen and Dr. Michael P.M. Finch to explore how divergent views shaped World War I's conflict. They discuss the critical concept of 'framing' and its impact on military decision-making. The conversation touches on cultural versus causal history, the influence of informal communication in military settings, and the challenges of adopting innovations. Their insights reveal the complexities behind commanders' perceptions and the realities of warfare.
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INSIGHT

Framing Bridges Cultural And Causal History

  • The editors chose 'framing' to bridge cultural and causal histories of WWI and to study how actors understood the war.
  • Framing lets historians examine perceptions, decisions, and social contexts together rather than in disciplinary silos.
INSIGHT

Comparative Work Is Resource-Intensive

  • Practical constraints make broad comparative archival work difficult, so the book aims as an initial step toward cross-national dialogue.
  • Editors accept limits while emphasizing the need for more comparative, multilingual research.
INSIGHT

Frames Connect Thought To Military Action

  • 'Framing' links perception, thought, and action so scholars can probe how commanders understood problems and acted.
  • The concept also enabled chapters to reframe theaters beyond Eurocentric views and include social and cultural dimensions.
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