The global escalation of the Second World War between 1931 and 1941 is re-examined in Jonathan Fennell’s new book, Collapse: A Global History of the Second World War, 1931-1941, which analyzes how transnational radicalisation drove total war. This historical reassessment directly challenges traditional, Eurocentric narratives by examining how interconnected global economies and rapid technological innovations impacted diverse populations.
The narrative grounds these global dynamics in the systemic failures of the interwar period, where local grievances and transnational shifts collided to disrupt the existing international order. It contrasts this perspective with Richard Overy’s thesis in Blood and Ruins, which frames the era from the 1931 Japanese invasion of Manchuria to 1945 as the last great imperial conflict. Ultimately, the work highlights how latecomer imperial powers like Germany, Italy, and Japan actively sought to dismantle the established global empires of Britain, France, the United States, and the Netherlands.
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