Posts about Reading, Writing, and Literature
Good evening all,
Firstly, I would like to apologize if this post is not appropriate for this sub. If so, please inform me and I will remove it. I am currently in the process of earning my masters degree in national security, and currently on the planning phase of my graduate thesis, which I would like to focus around unconventional warfare. Ideally, I would like to formulate a study examining historical cases of unconventional warfare with, and without, the support of foreign governments. This is still on the cutting board and subject to change, so at this point I have to conduct a literate review of previous material covering similar topics. If anyone has any specific readings / studies / books they would recommend I look over ( preferably no biographies / first person neratives), please let me know. In addition, if anyone knows of any websites or even blogs that cover similar material, I would appreciate the information.
(Attached bellow are two studies which I have already examined, which I believe are a good reference point)
Thank you all in advance.
https://www.soc.mil/ARIS/books/pdf/ARIS_Greece-BOOK-small.pdf
https://studenttheses.universiteitleiden.nl/access/item%3A2665881/view
Been getting into Hannah, reading his story collection, Long, Last, Happy. Been doing more reading on him, his techniques and ideas, and thought the sub might appreciate this quote - especially the person that recently posted questioning the value of a degree in Literature. Thoughts on the idea in the quote, or on Hannah and his work?
EDIT: link to the interview from which this quote comes. https://web.archive.org/web/20100307065624/http://www.oxfordamerican.org/articles/2010/mar/02/barry-hannah-19422010/