Dr. Alexander S. Burns Profile picture
Apr 1 25 tweets 7 min read Read on X
This academic year marks a decade of teaching military history in higher education for me.
I'd like to reflect upon the demographic that keeps me employed: my students who are "into" military history. I'm going to try to limit myself to observations rather than judgement. 🧵1/25 Image
These young people are frequently derided with memes about "starter packs" or paradox games. Some of my fellow graduate instructors at WVU called them "military history bros." Although a number of them were conservative white men, I've taught "milhist bros" of all stripes: 2/25
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women, people of color, liberals in both the modern and classical sense. An interest in military history isn't something you can just predict by looking at someone. These students did bother faculty members at times: 3/25 Image
When I expressed my desire to be a military historian to my undergraduate advisor, he replied, "Alex, I lost interest in most of that after age 10." So, the "milhist bros" never bothered me much, I used to be one. 4/25
Though, as a homeschooler, I like to think I was a bit quieter than most. What does bother me is students who fail to progress in their interest. I think there a few levels of interest/knowledge in military history among non-professionals, charting that is the point here. 5/25
Here are the levels, as I understand them:
Paradigm Invocation
Paradigm Rejection
Social/Cultural Contextualization
Measured Appreciation 6/25
Paradigm Invocation is the most common level of engagement with military history I see in both the classroom, and military historical public. The enthusiast invokes a personal/technological aspect of a "paradigm army" in the way a pre-modern individual might a charm. 7/25 Image
"The main gun of the Tiger I..."
"The leather cannons of Gustavus Adolphus..."
"The longrifle of the America Frontiersmen..."
"Patton's Third Army..."
"Together, Lee and Jackson..."
"The Oblique Attack of Frederick the Great..."
"The Baker Rifle of the Lights..."
and so on. 8/25 Image
In my mind, this is to some extent what Cathal Nolan was fighting against in "The Allure of Battle,": the notion that we can quickly sum up periods of military history via their "stats" and the performance of those stats at "decisive battles." 9/25 Image
When asked to say more on a particular period, the Paradigm Invoker often can't. When the enthusiast at your wargame table has explained how the Swedish leather guns at Breitenfeld were superior they often fall flat when you ask: "Tell me why Tilly won Wimpfen and Lutter?" 10/25 Image
This isn't a problem, especially if they are in your classroom! You have the chance now to push who is already enthusiastic to think a bit deeper! This is an opportunity rather than something to be annoyed at, at least in my book. 11/25
Now, next we have the Paradigm Rejector. In many ways, this is the same as the evangelical fundamentalist who becomes an antitheist: the same frameworks are still at work. Sometimes they will invoke the work of historians who contextualize paradigm armies. 12/25 Image
"The Tiger Tanks were worthless, they didn't have parts..."
"The Spanish Tercios won Nördlingen, the Swedes weren't good."
"Robert E. Lee was actually a bad general."
"Franz Szabo reminds us Frederick "the Great" was a pathetic general." 13/25 Image
Often, the Paradigm Rejectors, who are, on average, a bit more well read than the Paradigm Invokers, are the most difficult to shift in their opinions, and think they have it "figured out." Trying to play devil's advocate for the paradigm army is rarely a good solution: 14/25
This group will simply label you as a midwit who believes "the old lie" and shut down. Instead, my recommendation is to push these folks to read beyond the battles towards the logistics, operations, and perhaps most importantly, social and cultural context. 15/25
Having these students read beyond the battlefield is rewarding: the realization that the Canton System was more important to Frederick's success than iron ramrods *is * something that the paradigm rejectors are mentally receptive to, at least in my experience. 16/25 Image
These are the students who are ready to tackle social and cultural military history, and engage with primary sources in a meaty way, moving beyond battle snippets to the overall experience of war. Time and reading will give turn Paradigm Rejectors into Contextualizers. 17/25
This group is finally equipped to make value judgements about what made the paradigm armies unique: it wasn't always just those tactical deployments or technological marvels: it was the that paired with their social/cultural context. 18/25
This group is a delight: they are focused on things like the experience of the average rather than the elite. Asking "What was normal?" prepares them to finally understand what was unique about each of the armies of their period, and gain appreciation for it. 19/25
This group is focused on source criticism, epistemological questions, transnational comparisons, in addition to "war and society" and cultural history. Obviously, I've known many professionals in this group, but a surprising number of wargames and reenactors as well. 20/25 Image
Only by placing the paradigm army alongside its real opponents, rather than strawmen, can they finally begin to appreciate the complexity of the period. What motivated, clothed, paid, fed, and armed the men? How were they moved? 21/25 Image
Bringing it all together allows for an measured appreciation of the achievements of the paradigm army, in addition to its flaws, moving beyond the surface level. Some students can make this jump in weeks. Others never do. It took me multiple semesters. 22/25
If you see yourself in this list, don't feel judgement or criticism. Instead, read more, and enjoy the process, moving from memes to monographs, so to speak. Our society is better served by having people understand war in a substantial and serious way. 23/25
James provides this helpful crash-course below. People who have spent months and years studying war in a serious way are rarely jumping up and down for conflicts to begin. 24/25 Image
I hope this was helpful in terms of thinking about how people engage with the past, and encouraging a deeper engagement in thinking about military history and conflict.

And yes, Paradigm Rejectors, I know the Swedes didn't actually use leather guns at Breitenfeld. 25/25 Image

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More from @KKriegeBlog

Mar 18
Today, the wargame club gamed the Battle of Fleurus (1622). Despite being close to spring break, we had a great turn out. In history, a 14,000 strong Protestant army of Mansfeld and Brunswick attacked Don F. Gonzales de Cordoba's 8,000 strong detachment of Spanish veterans. 1/17
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The Protestant "Paladins" were trying to break through the Spanish position to reach threaten the city of Breda, which Ambrogio Spinola's Spanish forces were currently investing. The goal of the action was not so much to destroy Cordoba as break through. 2/17 Image
As such the road on the Spanish board edge was the Protestant objective: if their forces, numerically superior but qualitatively inferior, could break through to the board edge at that point, any Protestant unit moving off would ensure the siege of Breda was lifted. 3/17
Read 18 tweets
Feb 25
I attended an academic conference (History) this weekend.

There was a panel, run by brave graduate students, on the job market. I had to choke back my emotions, and I wasn’t the only one.

A report on how the kids (and by that: adults with advanced degrees) are doing. 1/23
The panel was quite moving, because like me, these PhD students attended a flagship state university in state that is much closer to the poorer than the richer end of the spectrum with a smaller faculty. (~25 history professors). 2/23
The panel was run by the History Graduate Student Association, and was composed of 4 current or former PhD students, as well as two faculty from different universities. The first PhD candidate, defending in a few weeks, spoke about the job market with 3 frameworks:
3/23
Read 23 tweets
Feb 21
I greatly enjoyed the "fascism doesn't win wars" discourse today.

However, I don't think those of us who live in liberal democracies will win bc of who we are either.

A 🧵on one of the reasons the fascists lost WW2, and my worries about American military power today. 1/22
First of all, it was refreshing to see the Wehrmacht put in its place. Despite Glantz and House's research being available for some time, the myth of the Wehrmacht as a (maybe * the *) superb fighting machine endures, at least in the eyes of my undergraduate students. Why? 2/22 Image
Because, winning wars isn't as simple as "focus on tech." My undergrads can all rattle off the impressive weapons that the Wehrmacht used: Tigers, King Tigers, Panthers, StG-44s, MG42, Flak 88s, FW190s V2 rockets etc etc. Weapon stats are trump, in the age of War Thunder. 3/22 Image
Read 22 tweets
Feb 10
A @TeamYankeeGame at my university wargame club today.

After the failure of the Soviet assault into Northern Italy in late April of 1986, NATO forces have launched a successful counteroffensive into East Germany. 1/11 Image
The speed of the NATO assault surprised the Warsaw Pact, leading to a collapse of positions on the inner-German border, bypassing Berlin. With Berlin contained, NATO troops are driving for crossing points on the Oder.

Using an old JFO map for the campaign. 2/11 Image
Today’s battle was a joint West German/American drive to take the small town of Wriezen, just northwest of Kostrzyn/Küstrin. 3/11 Image
Read 11 tweets
Jan 31
Most professors who publish and teach know things, actually.

This is literally just a plea to have a professor's life without doing ANY of the work.

So, what do professors do, and why is it valuable/worthwhile? 1/
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Professors are paid to do three things, essentially. Teaching, Research/Publication, and Service (committee work).
Teaching keeps the tuition dollars coming in (for a lot of faculty today, especially in the humanities at smaller colleges, this is their primary job.) 2/
Research, whether in the sciences in the humanities, is designed to advance human knowledge and increase the reputation of the department and university you are employed at.
Research is literally the process of knowing things in an in-depth and comprehensive way. 3/
Read 10 tweets
Jan 25
I'm just over a year late to this discourse. Thinking of it again bc of debate over drones their impact the battlefield. A Cavalry charge 🧵
TL;DR: watching some extras duke it out is not a substitute for a source-driven understanding of what occurred on the battlefield. 1/30
@maniagnosis does a great job of touching on some of the major points of the "infantry revolution" of the late middle ages, and also why, almost invariably, cavalry were outnumbered by infantry. 2/30
Let's choose the start date of 1500, and trace the story through to the demise of cavalry in the 1920s/30s. This gives some idea of even when another arm began to increasingly dominate the battlefield, (infantry 1300-1500), it still took ~400 years for cav to disappear. 3/30
Read 30 tweets

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