HARVARD HISTORICAL STUDIES
Cover: Nexus: Strategic Communications and American Security in World War I, from Harvard University Press Cover: Nexus in HARDCOVER

Harvard Historical Studies 162

Nexus

Strategic Communications and American Security in World War I

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Book Details

HARDCOVER

$62.00 • £45.95 • €55.80

ISBN 9780674028395

Publication: June 2008

Short

358 pages

6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches

6 maps, 3 charts

Harvard Historical Studies

World

This story involves not only the history of communication, but also diplomatic, military, technology, and business history. While investigating interrelated developments in these fields, Winkler recreates the global communication network in place at the outbreak of the war and shows how each side engaged in the first real information war. Finally, he analyzes U.S. officials’ reaction to this new warfare and the policies they adopted to redress this nation’s shortcomings in the field of global communication. A well-researched, high readable work that makes a valuable contribution to a number of historical areas.—T.A. Aiello, Choice

Winkler’s book provides a lesson in the evolutionary nature of technological change. Winkler explores the first global internet—the international telegraph cable system that began shrinking Planet Earth at the end of the 19th century.—Austin Bay, AustinBay.net

In a landmark book, Winkler shows how most of the issues of the information economy—and its handmaiden, information security—were thrust upon the United States by World War I, when the nation found that British domination of the cable infrastructure, combined with London’s strategic grasp of its possibilities, reduced the U.S. to a humiliating dependence. How America tried to escape from the shackles of the British monopoly on communications makes a fascinating tale.—Richard R. Fernandez, The Belmont Club

As children of the information age, we appreciate the vital role of communications in national security planning. Jonathan Winkler takes us back to an era when the principles of informational warfare were first being thrashed out—in foreign ministries, in military headquarters, under the sea, and in the atmosphere. A fascinating tale of technology, diplomacy, and intrigue.—H.W. Brands, University of Texas, Austin

The fight for mastery of global telecommunications in the midst of the First World War is a subject of the deepest importance that had lain undiscovered until now. Jonathan Winkler has reconstructed the complex nexus of strategy, technology, and diplomacy with admirable clarity. It is a fundamental contribution that demonstrates the need for a whole new field of historical inquiry.—Matthew Connelly, author of Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population

Winkler tells a story that should figure into all future accounts of U.S. participation in World War I.—Ernest R. May, Harvard University

By examining the ways in which World War I sparked official recognition of the commercial and strategic importance of cable and radio, Winkler illuminates a vital, but neglected, chapter in the history of global communications. This is a thoroughly researched, well-written, and engaging study.—Emily S. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine

Awards

  • 2010 Paul Birdsall Prize, American Historical Association
  • 2009 Distinguished Publication Award, Ohio Academy of History
  • 2008 Theodore & Franklin D. Roosevelt Naval History Prize, FDR Presidential Library, Roosevelt Institute, Theodore Roosevelt Association, and the New York Council, Navy League of the U.S.
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