A series of essays examines the psychological and cultural effects of large-scale war, tracing widespread disappointment and an altered relation to death. The author explores how declared civilized ideals are compromised by wartime behavior, leading to moral contradiction, social mistrust, and efforts to denigrate the enemy. Attention is given to individual and collective defenses such as denial, projection, and sublimation, and to the distinctive suffering of combatants and civilians. The essays consider mourning, religious and intellectual consolations, and the tension between instinctual drives and social structures that shapes both private grief and public attitudes toward mass violence.