Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995. — 400 p. — ISBN10: 0691001502; ISBN13: 978-0691001500
In his widely acclaimed To End All Wars, Thomas Knock provides an intriguing, often provocative narrative of Woodrow Wilson's epic quest for a new world order. The account follows Wilson's thought and diplomacy from his policy toward revolutionary Mexico, through his dramatic call for "Peace without Victory" in World War I, to the Senate's rejection of the League of Nations. Throughout Knock explores the place of internationalism in American politics, sweeping away the old view that isolationism was the cause of Wilson's failure and revealing the role of competing visions of internationalism--conservative and progressive.
A Political Autobiography
Wilson and the Age of Socialist Inquiry
Searching for a New Diplomacy
The Political Origins of Progressive and Conservative Internationalism
The Turning Point
Raising a New Flag: The League and the Coalition of 1916
"All the Texts of the Rights of Man": Manifestoes for Peace and War
"If the War Is Too Strong": The Travail of Progressive Internationalism and the Fourteen Points
Waiting for Wilson: The Wages of Delay and Repression
"The War Thus Comes to an End"
The Stern Covenanter
"A Practical Document and a Humane Document"
"The Thing Reaches the Depths of Tragedy"
Wilson's Fate
Epilogue, Echoes from Pueblo
Abbreviations
Notes