Works
- Patriotism under Three Flags: A Plea for Rationalism in Politics (1903)
- Europe's Optical Illusion (1909, 126-page pamphlet, given "fuller and more detailed treatment" in The Great Illusion)
- The Great Illusion: A Study of the Relation of Military Power to National Advantage (335 pages in 1910, followed by numerous "revised and enlarged" editions)
- America and the New World State (in U.S., 1912)
- The Foundations of International Policy (1912)
- War and the Workers (1913)
- Peace Treaties and the Balkan War (1913)
- Prussianism and its Destruction (1914)
- America and the New World-State. A Plea for American Leadership in International Organization (1915)
- Problems of the War and Peace: A Handbook for Students (1915)
- The World's Highway (1916)
- The Dangers of Half Preparedness (1916, in U.S.)
- War Aims: The Need for a Parliament of the Allies (1917)
- Why Freedom Matters (1917)
- The Political Conditions of Allied Success: A Protective Union of the Democracies (1918, in U.S.)
- The Treaties and the Economic Chaos (1919)
- The British Revolution and the American Democracy (1919)
- The Fruits of Victory (1921)
- The Press and the Organization of Society (1922)
- If Britain is to Live (1923)
- Foreign Policy and Human Nature (1925)
- Must Britain Travel the Moscow Road? (1926)
- The Public Mind: Its Disorders: Its Exploitation (1927)
- The Money Game: Card Games Illustrating Currency (1928)
- The Story of Money (1929)
- Can Governments Cure Unemployment? (1931, with Harold Wright)
- From Chaos to Control (1932)
- The Unseen Assassins (1932)
- The Great Illusion—1933 (1933)
- The Menace to Our National Defence (1934)
- Preface to Peace: A Guide for the Plain Man (1935)
- The Mystery of Money: An Explanation for Beginners (1936)
- This Have and Have Not Business: Political Fantasy and Economic Fact (1936)
- Raw Materials, Population Pressure and War (1936, in U.S.)
- The Defence of the Empire (1937)
- Peace with the Dictators? (1938)
- Must it be War? (1938)
- The Great Illusion—Now (1939)
- For What do We Fight? (1939)
- You and the Refugee (1939)
- Why Freedom Matters (1940)
- America's Dilemma (1941, in U.S.)
- Let the People Know (1943, in U.S.)
- The Steep Places (1947)
- After All: The Autobiography of Norman Angell (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1951; rpt. New York: Farrar, Straus and Young, 1952).
Read more about this topic: Norman Angell
Famous quotes containing the word works:
“You are always looking for already-felt emotions, just as you like to get an old pair of trousers back from the cleaners, which seem new when you dont look too closely. Artists are cleaners, dont let yourself be taken in by them. True modern works of art are made not by artists but quite simply by men.”
—Francis Picabia (18781953)
“The subterranean miner that works in us all, how can one tell whither leads his shaft by the ever shifting, muffled sound of his pick?”
—Herman Melville (18191891)
“Words are always getting conventionalized to some secondary meaning. It is one of the works of poetry to take the truants in custody and bring them back to their right senses.”
—William Butler Yeats (18651939)