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Combines essays on the "personality dimension" in the 19th and 20th
century international history, placing in a proper historical
perspective the impact of individual diplomats, politicians and
military strategists on foreign policy-making.
History is an old, yet constantly changing discipline.
Traditionally, the interpretation of the past oscillated between
two opposed poles; on the one hand, there were those who believed
that events were determined not by individuals but by an impersonal
process (though, of course, there were contending views of what
that process is, or how it unravels), and on the other hand, there
were those who stressed the contingent aspects of politics and
history, and hence the impact of personalities. Neither of these
two concepts of history is new.
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