The Routledge History of World Peace Since 1750
In: Routledge Histories Ser
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- List of illustrations -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction Disciplines in dispute-history, peace studies, and the pursuit of peace -- Part I Paradigms of peace -- 1 Philosophies of peace, 1750-1865 -- 2 Peace in an age of modernity, 1865-1914 -- 3 Liberal internationalism and the search for international peace -- 4 Structural conflict, systemic violence, and peace: A guided reading -- Part II Icons of peace -- 5 Three apostles of non-violence: An introduction to the religious thinking of Tolstoy, Gandhi, and Abdul Ghaffar Khan -- 6 The evolution of Tolstoyan pacifism in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union, 1900-1937 -- 7 One man's peace: Influences on Martin Luther King, Jr.'s non-violent philosophy -- 8 "Sane ideas which may yet save the world from further conflict": Bertrand Russell's and Julian Huxley's lecture tours in early Cold War Australia -- 9 Black Power and the anti-Vietnam War movement -- 10 Ibrahim Rugova and his peaceful resistance for independence of Kosovo -- 11 Nelson Mandela and the decolonial paradigm of peace -- Part III Religious and cultural dimensions of peace -- 12 Losing my religion: The effects of World War I on pacifism in the Stone-Campbell Movement -- 13 From Father Berrigan to Black Lives Matter: Literary representations of peace activism since 1945 -- 14 Film depictions of children as modern anti-war crusaders -- 15 Apocalyptic dissenters: Seventh-day Adventists and peace activism in the nineteenth century -- 16 Improvisatory peace activism? Graffiti during and after Egypt's most recent revolution -- Part IV Antinuclear peace activism -- 17 The nuclear freeze: Transnational pursuit of positive peace -- 18 Pacific concerns: Nuclear weapons and the peace movement in Australia, 1960-1967