ABSTRACT

Why does 1919 deserve further study and debate a hundred years later? What lessons for global history may we learn from the world order created at the end of the Great War? Drawing insight from the global turn of the past several decades that has forced us to reconsider the most important world events and processes since the French Revolution and especially the growing interest in World War I as a global conflict that extended far beyond the borders of Europe, this volume explores the global political ramifications of the treaties prepared at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 by focusing on key topics: how the Paris Peace Conference re-shaped the geo-political configurations of the Middle East, the importance of transformations in Asia and particularly China in the immediate postwar period, the shifts in Southeastern Europe, new feminist movements in Central Europe, and the pre-history of neoliberalism.

Read together, the papers demonstrate how the peace treaties signed in 1919 and 1920 marked a profound transformation on local, national, continental, and global scales.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

A World Made and Unmade

part I|44 pages

Revisiting the “Peace” in Europe

chapter 3|22 pages

The Versailles Treaty and the German Imperial Mindscape

The Navy, the Colonial East, and the Impossible Peace in Postwar Germany

part II|67 pages

Peripheries of Peace?

chapter 4|22 pages

Solving the Schleswig Question

Danish Agitation and International Reception of the Schleswig Plebiscite

chapter 5|21 pages

International Women in National Politics

The Little Entente of Women and the Role of Self-Determination in East Central Europe in the Wake of 1919 1

chapter 6|22 pages

Unlikely Internationalists

Ottoman-Turkish Views on the League of Nations During the Paris Peace Conference

part III|74 pages

China, A Missing Peace?

chapter 8|32 pages

Local Networks With Global Reach

Sichuanese “Citizen-Journalists” Reporting From the 1919 Paris Peace Conference and the Formation of Public Opinion in China

chapter 9|15 pages

The Meanings of the 1919 Moment in China

Sovereignty, Connectivity, and National Awakening

part IV|71 pages

The Birth of Global Governance

chapter 10|19 pages

Peace (Re)settlement

The Treaty of Versailles and the Reshaping of Global Migration Governance

chapter 12|24 pages

Neoliberalism and Peace

Libéralisme Constructif and Global Governance After the First World War

chapter |8 pages

Epilogue

The Unsettling Settlement of 1919