ABSTRACT

This revealing book illustrates how the passion for war was fostered and promoted. The author provides detailed evidence of how and why an image of Germany as a nation determined upon world hegemony was deliberately promoted by a group of British newspaper editors, proprietors and journalists. This book examines the role of these ‘scaremongers’. Were they as influential as their critics claimed? Did they influence the minds of their readers and shape events? Were they guilty of creating a climate of opinion that ensured that their prophecies of inevitable Anglo-German war became fact in 1914?

part |48 pages

For national security and party advantage: the politicians

part |138 pages

‘And he gathered them in a place called… Armageddon'

chapter |16 pages

A domestic interlude

Lord Northcliffe asserts himself

chapter |16 pages

Military matters

Repington fights real and imagined foes

chapter |19 pages

Over the brink

chapter |24 pages

Epilogue