Hörbuch: Washington and the Riddle of Peace
Washington and the Riddle of Peace
1 - Introduction, and The Immensity of the Issue and the Triviality of Men
- Download Introduction, and The Immensity of the Issue and the Triviality of Men audio
- Download Armaments the Futility of Mere Limitation audio
- Download The Trail of Versailles Two Great Powers Are Silent and Absent audio
- Download The Unknown Soldier of the Great War audio
- Download The President at Arlington audio
- Download The First Meeting audio
- Download What Is Japan? audio
- Download China in the Background audio
- Download The Future of Japan audio
- Download 'Security'—the New and Beautiful Catchword audio
- Download France in the Limelight audio
- Download Thus Far audio
- Download The Larger Question behind the Conference audio
- Download The Real Threat to Civilization audio
- Download The Possible Breakdown of Civilization audio
- Download What of America? audio
- Download Ebb Tide at Washington audio
- Download America and Entangling Alliances audio
- Download An Association of Nations audio
- Download France and England—the Plain Facts of the Case audio
- Download A Reminder about War audio
- Download Some Stifled Voices audio
- Download India, the British Empire and the Association of Nations audio
- Download The Other End of Pennsylvania Avenue—the Sieve for Good Intentions audio
- Download Africa and the Association of Nations audio
- Download The Fourth Plenary Session audio
- Download About the War Debts audio
- Download The Foundation Stone and the Building audio
- Download What a Stably Organized World Peace Means For Mankind audio
Hörbuch-Genres
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Beschreibung
As an observer at the WASHINGTON CONFERENCE FOR THE LIMITATION OF ARMAMENTS held in 1921 and attended by the victorious nations of The Great War, the acclaimed author H. G. Wells wrote 29 short essays that were serialized in the New York World and other newspapers. This book is a collection of those essays. They are not a record or description of the Conference, but the impressions of one visitor. Wells noted that the failed League of Nations was the first American initiative toward an organized world peace, and in its absence “the American mind has produced this second experiment, which has been tried with the loosest of constitutions and the most severely defined and limited of aims. Instead of a world constitution we have had a world conversation.”
The essays relate “one observer’s conviction of how things can be done, and of how they need to be done, if our civilization is indeed to be rescued from the dangers that encompass it and set again upon the path of progress.” While history would not bear out all of Wells’ various expressions of optimism and pessimism, his vision of world peace nevertheless remains relevant today. ( Lee Smalley)
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