The Marines? march up to Baghdad, Sherman?s trail of destruction
in Georgia, an army of Missouri volunteers trekking across the
Great Plains to Mexico?this wide-ranging and imaginative book tells
for the first time the story of how American armies from the sands
of Iraq to the halls of the Montezuma have followed figuratively in
the footsteps of the original Anabasis, the famous Greek march into
the interior of Asia made by Xenophon and the Ten Thousand in 400
BC.
Starting with the Iraq War, Tim Rood turns back to the conquest of
the American West and to the Civil War, showing how one of the most
famous episodes in classical antiquity was first appropriated in
the name of military expansion, and then used to express
conflicting responses to the most controversial campaign of the
Civil War. Allusions to Xenophon in speeches, newspaper reports,
and military memoirs are throughout read against Xenophon?s own
story.
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