重新考虑英国战争函电对巴尔干战争(1912-3)的看法

IF 0.5 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY INTERNATIONAL HISTORY REVIEW Pub Date : 2023-09-13 DOI:10.1080/07075332.2023.2254307
Ross Cameron
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于东南欧的外部表现的史学认为巴尔干战争(1912-3)在巩固该地区的负面刻板印象方面具有重要意义。尽管如此,很少有研究专门处理英国对这些冲突的表现。这篇文章仔细研究了战争期间英国的新闻通信,这些信息来源被以前的学者所忽视,他们倾向于对该地区的公开文学描述,以及盎格鲁-巴尔干政治接触的有形形式。这篇文章强调了国内政治文化的影响,特别是自由主义巴尔干委员会的宣传,以及战争通信的实用性,认为英国人对战争的看法比通常认为的更富有同情心。对冲突的描述是基于对奥斯曼帝国的东方主义假设的感知模式。记者们对盟军的胜利表示欢迎,认为这是西方的“进步”战胜了东方的“停滞”,并利用对奥斯曼人的暴力刻板印象,通过暴行宣传来强调盟军进攻的正义事业。虽然认识到英国国内对奥斯曼协会等组织的亲巴尔干报道越来越多的异议,但本文最后强调,由于持续时间短,“自相残杀”的第二次巴尔干战争对感知模式的影响较小。
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Reconsidering Perceptions of the Balkan Wars (1912-3) in British War Correspondence
Historiography about external representations of southeastern Europe places significance on the Balkan Wars (1912-3) in cementing negative stereotypes of the region. Despite this, there have been few studies dealing specifically with British representations of these conflicts. This article scrutinises British journalistic correspondence from the wars, sources neglected by previous scholarship in favour of overtly literary depictions of the region and tangible forms of Anglo-Balkan political contact. Foregrounding domestic political culture which shaped representations, notably the publicity of the liberal Balkan Committee, and the practicalities of war correspondence, this article argues British perceptions of the wars were more sympathetic than typically assumed. Representations of the conflicts were based around patterns of perception originating in orientalist assumptions about the Ottoman Empire. Reporters welcomed allied victories as the triumph of Western ‘progress’ over Eastern ‘stagnation’ and instrumentalised violent stereotypes about the Ottomans to highlight the just cause of the allied offensive via atrocity propaganda. While recognising growing dissent in Britain over pro-Balkan reporting from organisations such as the Ottoman Association, this article concludes by emphasising how the ‘fratricidal’ Second Balkan War had less of an impact on patterns of perception due to its short duration.
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: The International History Review is the only English-language quarterly devoted entirely to the history of international relations and the history of international thought. Since 1979 the Review has established itself as one of the premier History journals in the world, read and regularly cited by both political scientists and historians. The Review serves as a bridge between historical research and the study of international relations. The Review publishes articles exploring the history of international relations and the history of international thought. The editors particularly welcome submissions that explore the history of current conflicts and conflicts of current interest; the development of international thought; diplomatic history.
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