Editors
Studies in War, Society, and the Military
Studies in War, Society, and the Military focuses on books in which military history is placed in a larger social and cultural context and is designed to be of interest and use to historians of any specialty. The implications of war extend far beyond the battlefield, and the series seeks to engage perspectives from the histories of gender, environment, technology, and politics, broadly construed.
Empire between the Lines
Imperial Culture in British and French Trench Newspapers of the Great War
June 2023
Nebraska
Marianne Is Watching
Intelligence, Counterintelligence, and the Origins of the French Surveillance State
December 2021
Nebraska
Death at the Edges of Empire
Fallen Soldiers, Cultural Memory, and the Making of an American Nation, 1863–1921
February 2020
Nebraska
Policing Sex and Marriage in the American Military
The Court-Martial and the Construction of Gender and Sexual Deviance, 1950–2000
November 2018
Nebraska
On the Trail of the Yellow Tiger
War, Trauma, and Social Dislocation in Southwest China during the Ming-Qing Transition
July 2018
Nebraska
A Scientific Way of War
Antebellum Military Science, West Point, and the Origins of American Military Thought
August 2015
Nebraska
Beneficial Bombing
The Progressive Foundations of American Air Power, 1917-1945
January 2011
Nebraska