James Byrnes

Hiroshima et Nagasaki, une nécessité pour abréger la Seconde Guerre mondiale ? Une réponse d’Howard Zinn

Hiroshima après l’atomisation de 1945
Il y a 72 ans, respectivement le 6 et le 9 août 1945, des bombes atomisaient en quelques secondes les villes d’ Hiroshima et de Nagasaki au Japon. En mémoire de cette tragédie, nous republions ici l’article rédigé en 2015 par Baptiste Mannaia pour le Cercle des Volontaires :

Dropping the Bomb: A Historiographical Review of the Most Destructive Decision in Human History

By Derek Ide | The Hampton Institute | June 19, 2014 The historiography of the atomic bomb can be roughly categorized into three camps: traditionalists, revisionists, and middle-ground “consensus” historians. [1] Traditionalists, also referred to as orthodox[2] historians and post-revisionists, studying the atomic bomb generally accept the view posited by the Truman administration and articulated […]

Dropping the Bomb: A Historiographical Review of the Most Destructive Decision in Human History

By Derek Ide | The Hampton Institute | June 19, 2014 The historiography of the atomic bomb can be roughly categorized into three camps: traditionalists, revisionists, and middle-ground “consensus” historians. [1] Traditionalists, also referred to as orthodox[2] historians and post-revisionists, studying the atomic bomb generally accept the view posited by the Truman administration and articulated […]