Abstract
The immediate reaction to another work about John Dewey may be that it merely adds to the overflowing pile of books on the famed philosopher. But Charles F. Howlett and Audrey Cohan insist, with justification, that Dewey's place in the post–World War I peace movement remains understudied. Of course, many works, including Robert B. Westbrook's seminal John Dewey and American Democracy (1991), examine Dewey's views on war and peace.