REQUIRED READINGS: To be purchased: Parker, R.A.C. The Second World War: A Short History (Oxford University Press, 2001)

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HISTORY 349 THE WORLD AT WAR, 1939-1945 SPRING 2010 INSTRUCTOR: Paul Mazgaj OFFICE: 2121 MHRA E-MAIL : pmmazgaj@uncg.edu OFFICE HOURS: Mondays: 11:00-11:30 Fridays: 10:00-11:00 And by Appointment COURSE DESCRIPTION This course will begin with an examination of the causes of the war, which include the failure of the Peace of Paris, the Great Depression, the rise of National Socialism, and the successive diplomatic crises of the late 1930s. Next we will focus on the narrative history of the war. This section will include the great battles that punctuate the war as well as the mobilization of the material and human resources of the home front needed to fight a war on this scale. We will also consider the attempt by Hitler to construct his New Order, an order which included the forced labor of millions and the mass murder of millions more, including six million Jews. Finally, we will attempt to evaluate the impact of the war. This last section will include an attempt to measure the socioeconomic, political, and cultural impact of the war, an examination of the debates on such Allied war practices as the bombing of civilian populations and the use of the atomic bomb, and a brief description of the Cold War that emerged from the breakdown of the Grand Alliance. REQUIRED READINGS: To be purchased: Parker, R.A.C. The Second World War: A Short History (Oxford University Press, 2001) To be downloaded (Selections from the following books can be found on Blackboard, e-reserves; for specific chapters, see Lecture and Reading Schedule below) : Browning, Christopher. Ordinary Men (Harper, 1992) Crossman, Richard. The God that Failed (Harper Colophon Books, Eatwell, Roger. Fascism (Penguin, 1995) Eubank, Keith, World War II: Roots and Causes, 2 nd Ed. (Heath, 1992) Fussell, Paul. Wartime (Oxford University Press, 1989) Gilbert, Felix and David Large. End of the European Era (Norton, 2002) Keegan, John. The Second World War (Penguin, 1989) Kennedy, David. Freedom from Fear (Oxford, 2005) Kershaw, Ian. Fateful Choices (Penguin, 2007) Knoebel, Edgar (ed). Classics of Western Thought: The Modern World, Vol. III, 4 th Ed. (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1988) Lyons, Michael. World War Two, 3 rd Ed. (Pearson Prentice Hall, 2004) Merridale, Catherine. Ivan s War: Life and Death in the Red Army, 1939-1945 (Picador, 2006) O Neill, William. Democracy at War (Harvard, 1993)

Overy, Richard. Why the Allies Won (Norton, 1996) Paxton, Robert. Europe in the Twentieth Century, (Thomson, 2005) Sledge, E. B. With the Old Breed (Oxford, 1990) Stoler, Mark and Melanie Gustafson (eds). Major Problems in the Stromberg, Roland. Europe in the Twentieth Century (Prentice Hall, Terkel, Studs (ed). The Good War (Pantheon Books, 1984) Wilkinson, James and H. Stuart Hughes. Contemporary Europe 2 COURSE REQUIREMENTS Attendance is required, not optional. Only officially certified absences will be accepted. All unexcused absences will affect your grade; beyond three, your grade will be seriously affected. Also, as a courtesy to both the instructor and your fellow students, please be on time and turn off all cell phones before class starts. Examinations. There will be three examinations: two hour exams and a final. All three exams will have the same format: one part short essay, one part long essay. See Class Schedule below for dates. Grades. Your final grade will be composed of the following: first exam: 25% second exam: 25% final exam: 25% discussion grade: 25% Grading Scale. The undergraduate grading scale cut-offs are: A+ 97 C 73 A 93 C- 70 A- 90 D+ 67 B+ 87 D 63 B 83 D- 60 B- 80 F 59 C+ 77 Discussion Sections. Every Wednesday you will attend a discussion section, which, as the name suggests, will entail a discussion of the reading assignment for that day. It will also allow you to ask questions about lectures (and the readings assigned for the lecture days). The word discussion, of course, implies participation on your part. Your discussion grade (25%) will be determined by the frequency and quality of your contribution to class discussion. Therefore, please note: your participation--and the frequency and quality of that participation--will seriously affect your grade. Informal Writing Exercises. On a regular basis throughout the semester there will be unannounced writing exercises at the beginning of the discussion class on Wednesdays. They will be short (maximum two paragraphs) commentaries on a particular aspect of the reading assignments since the last discussion. These writing exercises are designed to serve three purposes: first, to give you regular practice in

written expression; second, to get you mentally pump-primed for the class that will 3 follow; finally, and not least, to keep you on track with your reading. Given the fact that these exercises will be unannounced, you need to have completed the day's reading assignment before every discussion class. These short, informal writing exercises will not be "graded" in the ordinary sense. Instead, they will receive one of the following marks: a check (indicating satisfactory performance); a check plus (indicating a performance which is especially thoughtful, complete, and well-conceived); a check minus (indicating unsatisfactory performance). A check minus cannot be redone. It will signal to me that either you have not done the reading or you have not done it carefully enough. Better than average performance on these informal writing exercises will be counted positively in your "discussion grade." More than a few check minuses will begin to affect your grade; like absences, they will have serious consequences for your grade. If you are not in class on a particular day (or if you miss the exercise by coming late), you will receive a check minus. Plagiarism and the Academic Integrity Policy. Plagiarism is a serious academic crime that occurs when someone uses the words or ideas of someone else without giving that person credit in a formal citation. Punishment for violations are outlined in the Academic Integrity Policy. For an explanation see the UNCG website under Academic Integrity Policy. LECTURE AND READING SCHEDULE ER= Electronic Reserve (available on Blackboard) T=Text (Parker, The Second World War, to be purchased) M=Monday; W=Wednesday; F=Friday All Wednesdays are discussion (meet in assigned room) Week 1 (January 18-22): M: Martin Luther King Day: No Class W: Introduction F: The Great War : An Overview Readings: Gilbert and Large, First World War ER Week 2 (January 25-29): M: The Peace of Paris Readings: Wilkinson and Hughes, Settlement of 1919-1923" ER W: Hitler s Worldview Readings: Hitler, My Struggle ER F: Hitler s Climb to Power Readings: Eatwell, Germany The Rise of Nazism ER Week 3 (February 1-5): M: The Nazi State

Readings: Eatwell, Germany: The Consolidation of the Nazi Dictatorship ER W: Explaining Hitler Readings: Eubank, Hitler Enigma ER F: The Soviet State Readings: Wilkinson and Hughes, The Stalinist System ER 4 Week 4 (February 8-12): M: The Origins of World War II: The Path to War Readings: Paxton, Paris Peace Settlement Dismantled ER W: The Origins of World War II: The Czech Crisis Readings: Eubank, Czechoslovakia and Munich ER F: The Fall of Poland and the Phoney War Readings: Lyons, Blitzkrieg in the East, Sitzkieg in the West ER Week 5 (February 15-19): M: The Fall of France Readings: Parker, pp. 21-43 T W: Rumblings in the Far East Readings: Kershaw, Tokyo, Summer and Autumn 1940" ER F: The Battle of Britain Readings: Parker, pp. 44-49 T Week 6 (February 22-26): M: Barbarossa: The Nazi War Machine Turns East Readings: Parker, pp. 60-71 Merridale, Disaster Beats Its Wings ER W: FIRST EXAM (bring blue book) F: The Japanese Offensive in the Pacific Readings: Parker, pp. 72-94 T Week 7 ( March 1-5): M: The Nazi Empire Readings: Lyons, Hitler s New Order in Europe ER W: A Necessary War? Readings: Stoler and Gustafson, US Entry into World War II ER F: The Allies Respond: The Big Three and Strategy I Readings: Parker, pp. 115-130 T Week 8 (March 8-12): SPRING BREAK Week 9 (March 15-19): M: The Tide Turns: The Battle for the Atlantic and North Africa Readings: Parker, pp. 95-114 T Lyons, War in the Atlantic ER

5 W: The Allies Respond: The Big Three and Strategy II Readings: Stoler and Gustafson, Creating a Global Strategy ER F: The Tide Turns: The Eastern Front Readings: Overy, Stalingrad and Kursk ER Week 10 (March 22-26): M: Mobilizing for Total War I Readings: Parker, pp. 131-150 T W: The US Home Front Readings: Kennedy, The Cauldron of the Home Front ER F: Mobilizing for Total War II Readings: O Neill, The Transformation of Everyday Life T Week 11 (March 29-April 2): M: Strategic Bombing Readings: Parker, pp. 151-176 Terkel, Bombers and the Bombed ER W: SECOND EXAM (bring blue book) F: SPRING HOLIDAY Week 12 (April 5-9): M: Eastern and Southern Fronts: The Soviets Advance, The Anglo-Americans Stall Readings: Parker, pp. 195-223 T W: The Experience of Battle: The Anglo-Americans and the Soviets Readings: Terkel, D-Day and All That ER Merridale, Exulting, Grieving, and Sweating Blood ER F: The Second Front in Northern France: D-Day Readings: Parker, pp. 195-223 T Week 13 (April 12-16): M: Victory in Europe Readings: Lyons, End of the Thousand-Year Reich ER W: The Experience of Battle: The Pacific War Readings: Sledge, On to Peleliu ER F: The War in the Pacific Readings: Lyons, Island Hopping in the Pacific ER Week 14 (April 19-23): M: Victory in the Pacific Readings: Parker, pp. 222-242 T

W: The Holocaust and Ordinary Germans Readings: Parker, pp. 264-80 T Browning, Reserve Police Battalion 101" ER F: The Legacy of World War II: From Despair to a New Europe Readings: Parker, pp. 281-304 T 6 Week 15 (April 26-30): M: The Legacy of World War II: From Grand Alliance to the Cold War Readings: Stromberg, Europe and the Cold War, 1945-1956" ER W: The Controversy over the Atomic Bomb Readings: Stoler and Gustafson, Atomic Bomb and the End of World War II ER F: Evaluations and Loose Ends Week 16: Tuesday, May 4, FINAL EXAM (bring blue book)