One of Choice's Outstanding Academic Titles for 2013 "This excellent book is the best in its field, and it deserves and will surely gain wide readership."--Choice "War in Social Thought issues a provocative warning to those who engage in theoretical and political debates without taking account of the history of ideas. Indeed, Hans Joas and Wolfgang Knobl demonstrate that seemingly new structural ideas about war and peace in fact have antecedents in the past and are discredited by the bloody history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries."--Ingo Trauschweizer, Michigan War Studies Review "That this book provides a good recounting of the effects of warfare within the world stage of competing nation-states bound by their own domestic dilemmas of economics and politics is what makes it useful."--Jerome Braun, Society (Springer) "This book is an excellent synthesis of the literature on war, and the authors' own perspective on the debates is often incisive."--Michael Mann, American Journal of Sociology
"Viewed in its social context, war embraces every dimension of human life, yet the subject of war is almost wholly missing from social thought. This book is a very valuable corrective to this situation and well worth reading."—Edward Luttwak, Center for Strategic and International Studies
"There has been a tendency in social thought to stay clear of the issues of war despite its importance in shaping the modern age. But, as this important and erudite study shows, war keeps on intruding. By demonstrating how much theorists have struggled with the problems of war, Joas and Knöbl illuminate vital aspects of social theory—and of war itself."—Lawrence Freedman, King's College London
"This book, written by two eminent social theorists, has no parallel. Hans Joas and Wolfgang Knöbl tackle a fundamental problem in historical and contemporary social theory: the conceptualization of war as a fundamental phenomenon in social life. At the same time, they provide a comprehensive review of thinking about war in modern social theory since Hobbes. This book presents an impressive panorama of its subject."—Dieter Senghaas, University of Bremen