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Review Sessions for Exam III Wednesday April 11, 3:30 P.M. HUMB 360 Thursday April 12, 7:30 P.M. Totalitarianism and the Decline of the West.
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Review Sessions for Exam III Wednesday April 11, 3:30 P.M. HUMB 360 Thursday April 12, 7:30 P.M.
Totalitarianism and the Decline of the West The era of individualism, liberalism and democracy, of humanitarianism and freedom, is nearing its end. The masses will accept with resignation the victory of the Caesars, the strong men, and will obey them. -Oswald Spengler, The Decline of the West
A. The Progressives’ War 1. 14 PointsInternationalism Woodrow Wilson
B. 1918 1. Final gambleLudendorff Offensive (March) Wilhelm II abdicates(November)“November Criminals”
D. Opportunity missed 1. Diktat article 231- responsibility / reparations 2. League of Nations 3. Reorganized empires- mandates
Legacy of Versailles 1. Allies not interested in progressive war - disillusionment w/ “democracy” • US rejects League- return to near-isolationism • Europe festers
3. League of Nations too weak to: - establish new balance of power - rebuild Europe - contend with Bolshevism in the East
Dictatorship and Ideology “I was ripe to be converted”- Arthur Koestler 1949
I. Revolution in Russia 1917-1920 Fall of the Romanov Dynasty Nicholas II
A. Reform & Repression • 1904-05 Russo-Japanese War- 1905-07 “Revolution” • The “Mad Monk” Rasputin
B. Feb/March Revolution 1. Provisional Government - Alexander Kerensky
2. Soviets (workers and soldiers) - consensus lacking; locally independent
C. Red October 1. Social Democrats (Marxists) - historical dialectic
2. Mensheviks- parliamentary means Bolsheviks- violent revolution -- bourgeois self-absorption -- discipline
3. V. I. Ulyanov (Lenin) - professional revolutionaries - role of soviets 4. April Theses - peace, land and bread
5. Storming the Winter Palace Leon Trotsky
D. Bolsheviks establish power 1. Treaty of Brest-Litovsk 1918
4. Politburo - socialist dictatorship 5. New Economic Policy, 1921-28
Fanaticism and Salvation Thomas Mann1875-1955 Humanity seems to have run like boys let out of schoolaway from the humanitarian, idealistic nineteenth century,from whose morality – if we can speak at all of morality inthis connection – represents a wide and wild reaction. - “An Appeal to Reason” 1931
A. Stalinization 1. Totalitarianism- mind and body - v. Trotsky
2. Forced industrialization- 5-Year Plans- Collectivization Liquidation of the kulaks
3. Comintern 4. Great Purges, 1934-38 “Gulag Archipelago” Solzhenitsyn
5. Stalin’s foreign policy - Treaty of Rapallo, 1924 - Mutual Non-Aggression Pact, 1939
B. Betrayal of Socialism • Stalin’s “Animal Farm”- ideology v. humanity- NKVD “Black Ravens”- Socialist dictatorship 2. Left in crisis George Orwell
II. Italian Fascism Nationalism Anti-liberal values Politics of the Irrational
A. Legacy of Unification • Weak liberal/democratic tradition • Failures of WWI
B. Mussolini’s Italy • Benito Mussolini 1922-43 • Fascio- “witch’s brew” of ideologies- politics of the irrational
3. Attack on “bourgeois” values 4. Squadristi “black shirts”
Alliance with industrialists- corporative system 6. Cult of Personality Il Duce- fasces
7. Lateran Treaty, 1929 - Linkage of fascism to anti-modernism
C. The New Roman Empire 1. Militarism- Ethiopia ’35- Albania ’39 2. Pact of Steel, 1939
III. The Spanish Civil War Dress rehearsal for WWII, 1936-39 Guernica - Pablo Picasso
A. The Spanish Republic 1. 1931, Popular Front 2. Republican v. Nationalist - Francisco Franco
B. International Event 1. Condor Legion 2. International Brigade - Abraham Lincoln Brigade Hemingway, For Whom the Bell Tolls
IV. Paralyzed democracy Depression Division Isolation Salvador Dali
A. France 1. Political polarization 2. Depression cancels out reform Leon Blum
B. Great Britain • Maintaining Empire 2. Fascist fan club- British Union of Fascists- Edward VIII
C. The United States and the New Deal 1. Leftward expansion 2. Groundwork for prosperityFDR
Totalitarian Europe Rhineland ’36 Anschluss ’37 Munich Agreement ‘38 Poland, ‘39