
Arguably No Nation Is As Closely Associated With The Term Morale As Great Britain. Yet This Concept That Seems So Innate To The British People Was Carefully Cultivated Within Many Spheres Of Modern National Life. In This First Critical History Of Morale, Daniel Ussishkin Asks How Is It That Modern Britons Have Come To Regard Morale As A Category Of Conduct, Vital For The Success Of Collective Effort In War And Peace, And A Mark Of Good, Modern, And Human Managerial Practice, Appropriate For A Democratic Age. He Narrates The Intellectual, Cultural, And Institutional History Of Morale In Modern Imperial Britain: Its Emergence As A New Concept During The Long Nineteenth Century, Its Changing Meanings And Significations, And The Social And Political Goals Those Who Discussed, Observed, Or Managed Morale Sought To Achieve. Formalized As A New Military Disciplinary Problem During The Long Nineteenth Century, Morale Came To Permeate Nearly Every Civilian Sphere Of Life During The Era Of The Two World Wars As A New Way Of Managing Human Conduct. This Book Traces How It Gradually Emerged From A Problem That Was Regarded As Residual At Best To One That Was Seen As The Epitome Of Proper Managerial Practice, Its Institutional Manifestations And Promotion By Myriad Organizations And The Social-democratic State, And Its Emergence As A Potent Political Concept From Britain's Social-democratic Moment Until The Ascendancy Of The New Right. Daniel Ussishkin's Morale Tells The History Of Concept Central To The Management Of War, Business, And Civic Society Not Just In Britain But In Modern Culture Writ Large.
This book investigates the historical development of the concept of morale as a vital category of conduct in modern British society. Daniel Ussishkin, a historian specializing in modern Britain, utilizes archival research and institutional analysis to trace how morale evolved from a niche military concern into a pervasive managerial tool. He argues that the concept was deliberately cultivated to regulate human behavior across civilian and state spheres, reflecting broader shifts in democratic governance and social management.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the history of management and the social sciences in Britain. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous examination of how political and social goals shaped the modern understanding of collective conduct.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190469080
ISBN-13:
9780190469085
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