Title: Ch. 28
1UNIT IX
2The Age of Anxiety
- Uncertainty in Modern Thought
- Modern Philosophy
- Nietzche before WWI said the optimistic
Christian order was obsolete - WWI accelerated change in modern philosophical
thought - Existentialists
- Believed there was no universal meaning to life
- Generally atheists
- Height during and after WWII
-
3- Revival of Christianity
- Loss of faith in human reason turned many back to
Christianity (contrast to existentialists) - New Physics
- Albert Einsteins Theory of Relativity, 1905
- German-born
- Challenged Newtons ideas of gravity
- Freudian Psychology (Sigmund Freud)
- Believed much of human behavior is irrational
(called it the unconscious) - Conscious mind is unaware of what the unconscious
mind wants - Weakened faith in reason
- The Interpretation of Dreams, 1900
4- 20th century literature
- Came out of the disillusionment of WWI
- Expression of anxiety
- Examples Yates, Virginia Woolf, F. Scott
Fitzgerald, T.S. Elliot, Franz Kafka - Modern Art
- Cubism (1907) transformed natural shapes into
geometrical ones - Dada movement (1916-1924) works meant to be
absurd, nonsensical and meaningless - hobbyhorse
- Surrealism (1924) sought to link the world of
dreams with real life (beyond or above reality) - Inspired by Freud
Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937
5- Music
- Moved away from traditional styles
- Example jazz
- Came out of the U.S.
- Captured the new freedom of the age
- New dances were soon to follow (i.e. The
Charleston) - Shocked society before being embraced
- Movies and Radio
- Replaced traditional arts for entertainment
purposes - Radios were a powerful tool for political
propaganda - Spread information quickly and effectively
6Society becomes more open
- Women
- Broke with traditions
- Wore loose fitting clothing rather than the
restrictive clothing and hairstyles of pre-WWI
era (i.e. flappers) - Wore make-up, bobbed their hair, drove cars,
smoked, drank, etc. - Women suffrage
- Women gained the right to vote in many countries
- U.S., Britain, Germany, Sweden, Austria
7The Great Depression1929-1939
- After WWI
- every major European nation was nearly bankrupted
- U.S. and Japan came out of WWI in better
financial shape (not wartime battlefields) - Sudden rise in new democracies
- Europes last absolute rulers had been replaced
by constitutional democracies - i.e. Hapsburgs in Austria-Hungary, Hohenzollerns
in Germany, Ottomans in Turkey
8The Weimer RepublicGermany, 1919
- Weak government
- Lacked a strong democratic tradition
- Several political parties trying to gain power
- Economic instability
- Did not tax enough
- To pay for the war effort, and eventually their
reparations, they simply printed more paper money - Led to outrages inflation (and deflation of the
value of a mark) - Helped by the Dawes Plan (1924) which slowed
inflation and moved Germany on the path to
economic recovery - Blamed for the German loss in WWI
- Weimer Republic had signed the Treaty of
Versailles
9- The Stock Market Crash (1929)
- European economies were being held together by
the stability of the U.S. economy - U.S. econ was flawed
- 1) uneven distribution of wealth
- 2) overproduction by business and agriculture
- 3) lessening demands for consumer goods
- When the stock market crashed, the U.S. started
to recall private loans from Europe - Led to a global depression
10Responses to the Great Depression
- The New Deal (U.S.)
- 1933, under F. D. Roosevelt
- Hit both the industrial and agricultural spheres
with reforms - Scandinavian Response
- Increased social welfare benefits and used govt
deficit spending to finance public works projects - Very successful
- Recovery and Reform in Britain and France
- British manufacturing reorientation from
international to national - France political disunity hurt their efforts
only attempt was Leon Blums Popular Front govt?
a coalition of communist and moderate parties
11Totalitarianism What is it?
- Government takes control over EVERY aspect of
public and private life - Challenges Western (France, Britain, U.S.) values
- Freedom, reason, individual worth, etc.
12Characteristics
- Dictatorship and one-political party rule
- Dynamic leader
- Unified ideology
- State control over all sectors of society
- State control over the individual
- Dependence on modern technology
- Organized violence
13JOSEPH STALINTHE MAN OF STEEL
- 1922-1927 climbed to power taking various offices
in the Russian Communist Party - 1928 Stalin takes over complete control of the
party - Sends Leon Trotsky, founder and commander of the
Red Army and leader of the Left Opposition, into
exile in 1929 during the Great Purge - His vision to transform the Soviet Union
(created in 1922) into a totalitarian state - socialism in one country
14Stalins Economics
- Command economy govt makes all the economic
decisions - Collective farms farms owned by the govt,
people were forced to work toward a quota
(numerical goal) - Controls lives of the workers
- Work hours conditions
- Police arrest or execute those that dont follow
the rules - Kulaks a class of wealthy peasants who resisted
- many were executed or sent to work in camps
- Five Year Plan 1928- set quotas for output of
steel, coal, oil and electricity limited
production of consumer goods - Leads to shortages
- Also led to impressive economic gains for Russia
15Weapons of Totalitarianism
- Police used tanks and armored cars to stop riots
- Monitored phone lines, read mail, and planted
informers (spies) in society - Great Purge 1934-Stalin turned against members
of the Communist Party
16Indoctrination and Propaganda
- Stressed the importance of sacrifice and hard
work to build the Communist state - Propaganda biased or incomplete information to
sway people to accept certain beliefs or actions - Social realism an artistic style that praised
Soviet life and Communist values
17Fascism What is it?
- Definition militant political government which
emphasizes loyalty to the state and the leader - Characteristics
- Extreme nationalism
- Revival of the economy
- Authoritarian leader
- One political party
- Did not want a classless society
18Italy Benito Mussolini
- Newspaper editor and politician
- Founded the Fascist Party in 1919
- Criticized Italys govt
- Led a campaign of terror against communists and
socialists - Gained support from the middle class,
aristocracy, and industrial leaders
19Mussolinis Policy
- Abolished democracy
- Outlawed all political parties except the
Fascists - Censored communication
- Controlled the economy by working with
industrialists and large landowners - despite his attempts, Mussolini never had total
control in Italy
20Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany
- Background
- Born in Austria in 1889
- Fought in WWI
- After WWI he settled in Munich, Germany
- Failed as an artist
- Found his calling in the new Nazi political party
21Rise of the Nazis
- Nazi National Socialist German Workers Party
- Right winged (conservative) group
- Believed that Germany needed to overturn the
Treaty of Versailles - wanted to rebuild their army/navy
- Did not agree with the clause that placed the
blame for WWI on Germany
22- Supported by the middle and lower classes
- Set up a private army called stormtroopers
- Wore brown shirts and adopted the swastika as
their symbol
23Hitler Der Fuhrer
- the leader
- Successful in the party as an organizer and
charismatic speaker - Attracted many members to the party
24Munich Putsch 1923
- Nazis plotted to seize ultimate power in Germany
- Failed ? Hitler arrested
- Sentenced to 5 years in jail
- Wrote Mein Kampf (My Struggle)
- Blamed communists and Jews for Germanys problems
- Declared blond and blue-eyed Germans as the
master race - Aka Aryans
25Hitler becomes Chancellor
- By 1932 Nazis were the largest political party in
Germany - Jan. 1933 Hitler elected
- Acted quickly to strengthen his position
- Called for new elections, but the Reichtag
(German govt building) caught fire before the
elections could be held - Blamed Communists for the fire
- Helped Nazis win a majority in the govt
- Hitler begins to set up a dictatorial rule in
Germany
26(No Transcript)
27The Second World War
- Aggression and appeasement (1933-1939)
- Hitler withdrew Germany from the League of
Nations (Oct. 1933) - Appeasement the making of concessions to an
aggressor in order to avoid war - British policy that prevented the formation of a
united front against Hitler - Isolationism belief that political ties with
other countries should be avoided - U.S. policy beginning in 1935 and lasting until
1941
28Hitlers Third Reich
- Empire Building
- 1936 Mussolini and Hitler form an alliance
- 1938 Hitler takes Austria and the Sudetenland
with British approval - Appeasement at its finest!
- 1939 takes all of Czechoslovakia and then
demands territory from Poland - France and Britain give an ultimatum
- If Hitler invades Poland, they will declare war
against him
29Blitzkrieg
- Hitlers forces overran Poland with his
lightening war - Conquered Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, and
France by the summer of 1940 - France captured by Germany in June 1940 took
control of the northern part and left the
southern part to a puppet government
headquartered in the city of Vichy (VEESHee) - Battle of Britain (fall 1940 to May 1941)
- Germans met strong British resistance
- British Royal Air Force (RAF)
- German air force Luftwaffe (LOOFTvahfuh)
- British victory shifted Hitlers focus to the
Eastern Front and the Mediterranean
30(No Transcript)
31Hitler vs. Stalin
- 1941 Hitler conquered Greece and Yugoslavia
- Winter 1941-1942
- Soviets stopped German advance just outside
Moscow - Called Operation Barbarossa
- Soviets had 5 million men in their army
- Yet, poorly equipped
- As the Russians retreated they used the scorched
earth policy they had used to defeat Napoleon - That along with a harsh Russian winter kept
Hitler out of the capital and took 500,000 German
lives
32Japan in WWII
- December 1941? attack on Pearl Harbor
- Brought the U.S. into WWII
- Isoroku Yamamoto
- Leader of the Japanese fleet
- Quickly conquered Hong Kong (previously held by
the British), Singapore, the Dutch East Indies,
Burma - 1 million square miles of land, 150 million
people - Came as conquerors
- Bataan Death March
33The Grand Alliance(The Allies)
- Britain, the U.S., and the U.S.S.R.
- Focused on defeating Germany, then face Japan
- Unified them economically
- Tide of Battle
- Turned in Soviet, North Africa, and the Pacific
- Battle of Midway huge success for the U.S.
against Japan - By spring 1943, North Africa freed from the Axis
Powers
34End of WWIIMay 1945
- In spite of huge increases in German production
between 1942-1944, the Allies conquered much of
Italy, invaded France, and finally defeated
Hitler. - Hitler committed suicide April 1945
- FDR dies in April 1945
- Japan surrendered in Sept of 1945
- V-J Day
- Hiroshima and Nagasaki
35(No Transcript)
36End of WWII
- May 8, 1945V-E Day
- 60 million casualties
- Europe left in ruins
- Nuremberg Trials
- 22 Nazi leaders charged with committing crimes
against humanity (the Holocaust) - Hitler, SS chief Heinrich Himmler, and Minister
of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels escaped trial by
committing suicide - 12 sentenced to death
- 11 executed on Oct. 16, 1946
37- Japan
- 2 million lives lost
- Allies had stripped Japan of its colonial empire
- Emperor Hirohito urged the Japanese to work
together to rebuild Japan - U.S. occupies Japan
- Under the leadership of General Douglas MacArthur
- Democratization
- MacArthur and his advisors drew up a new
constitution - Went into effect on May 3, 1947
- Emperors power significantly diminished
- Established a 2-house parliament (the Diet)
- All over the age of 20 could vote
- Article 9 Japan could no longer declare war
- Demilitarization
- Disbanding the Japanese armed forces
- Sept. 1951, U.S. and 48 other nations sign a
peace treaty with Japanofficially ending WWII