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- Title
The British Way of War: Cultural Assumptions and Practices in the South African War, 1899-1902.
- Authors
Miller, Stephen M.
- Abstract
This essay explores the impact of late Victorian cultural assumptions on the conduct of the South African War of 1899-1902, both at home and on the battlefield. It contends that three cultural values, intrinsic to late Victorian culture--cosmopolitanism, political egalitarianism, and race--shaped British soldiers' sense of justice at the outset of the war and, as a result, influenced their actions on and off the battlefield. This article emphasizes that the numerous "small wars" fought by British armies in the late nineteenth century, of which the South African War was the largest, were each unique and worthy of study not just as political history but as cultural military history.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; SOUTH African War, 1899-1902; CULTURAL values; COSMOPOLITANISM; EQUALITY; HISTORY of war &; society; AFRIKANERS; BRITISH military history; RACE relations in Great Britain; HISTORY
- Publication
Journal of Military History, 2013, Vol 77, Issue 4, p1329
- ISSN
0899-3718
- Publication type
Essay