Misfire, Paul MillerMelamed
Misfire, Paul MillerMelamed
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Misfire
The Sarajevo Assassination and the Winding Road to World War I

Author: Paul Miller-Melamed

Narrator: Rick Adamson

Unabridged: 9 hr 47 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 07/26/2022


Synopsis

The story has so often been told: Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of the Habsburg Empire, was shot dead on June 28, 1914, in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo. Thirty days later, the Archduke's uncle, Emperor Franz Joseph, declared war on the Kingdom of Serbia, producing the chain reaction of European powers entering the First World War.

In Misfire, Paul Miller-Melamed narrates the history of the Sarajevo assassination and the origins of World War I from the perspective of the Balkans. Miller-Melamed embeds the incident in the longer-term conditions of the Balkans that gave rise to the political murder. He thus illuminates the centrality of the Bosnian Crisis and the Balkan Wars of the early twentieth century to European power politics, while explaining how Serbs, Bosnians, and Habsburg leaders negotiated their positions in a dangerous geopolitical environment. Despite the absence of evidence tying official Serbia to the assassination conspiracy, Miller-Melamed shows how it spiraled into a diplomatic crisis that European statesmen proved unable to resolve peacefully.

Contrasting the vast disproportionality between a single deadly act and an act of war that would leave ten million dead, Misfire contends that the real causes for the world war lie in "civilized" Europe rather than the endlessly discussed political murder.

About Paul Miller-Melamed

Paul Miller-Melamed teaches history at the John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin in Poland and McDaniel College in the United States. He is the author of From Revolutionaries to Citizens: Antimilitarism in France, 1870-1914 and coeditor of Embers of Empire: Continuity and Rupture in the Habsburg Successor States after 1914.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David on March 10, 2022

Paul Miller-Melamed offers a new examination of what is often described as the twenty-first century's most infamous assassination in Sarajevo. However, his account is firmly aligned with A. J. P. Taylor's assessment that the majority of what was written about the killing of Franz Ferdinand was rubbi......more

Goodreads review by Cara on March 06, 2024

DNF. The author seems invested in grinding a personal axe with narrow-minded historiography, spending far too much time arguing that Gavrilo Princip’s assassination of Franz Ferdinand somehow shouldn’t be seen as an epoch-making event simply because it didn’t make waves at the time. He also tries to......more

Goodreads review by Dimitrii on October 27, 2024

Myths, lazy research and orientalist assumptions are dealt with. Not many archival sources but a careful narration of a much-studied episode put it in its rightful place. "The penniless assassin inadvertently set off an international crisis, but it was a prosperous group of powerful statesmen who li......more