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Key Concept 4.1 Total war and poli5call instability in the first half of the 20th century gave way to a polarized state order during the Cold War, and eventually to efforts at transna5onal union. Key Concept 4.2 The stresses of economic collapse and total war engendered internal conflicts within European states and created conflic5ng concep5ons of the rela5onship between the individual and the state, as demonstrated in the ideological bagle among liberal democracy, communism, and fascism. A variety of factors including na@onalism, military plans, the alliance system, and imperial compe@@on turned a regional dispute in the Balkans into World War I. New technologies confounded tradi@onal military strategies and led to massive troop losses. February 22 843-855 834-837 World War I, caused by a complex interac5on of long- and short- term factors, resulted in immense losses and disrup5ons for both victors and vanquished. Machine gun Barbed wire Submarine Airplane Poison Gas Tank The effects of military stalemate and total war led to protest and insurrec@on in the belligerent na@ons and eventually to revolu@ons that changed the interna@onal balance of power. The war in Europe quickly spread to non- European theaters, transforming the war into a global conflict. Armenian genocide Arab revolt against the Turks Japanese aggression in the Pacific and on the Chinese mainland The rela@onship of Europe to the world shiwed significantly with the globaliza@on of the conflict, the emergence of the United States as a world power, and the overthrow of European empires.

In Russia, World War I exacerbated long- term problems of poli@cal stagna@on, social inequality, incomplete industrializa@on, and food and land distribu@on, all while crea@ng support for revolu@onary change. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of revolu@onary change in Russia such as the following: February/March Revolu@on Petrograd Soviet Friday February 24 842-849 The Russian Revolu5on created a regime based on Marxist Leninist theory. Military and worker insurrec@ons, aided by the revived soviets, undermined the Provisional Government and set the stage for Lenin s long- planned Bolshevik revolu@on and establishment of a communist state. The Bolshevik takeover prompted a protracted civil war between communist forces and their opponents, who were aided by foreign powers. In order to improve economic performance, Lenin compromised with free market principles under the New Economic Policy, but awer his death Stalin undertook a centralized program of rapid economic moderniza@on. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of the Soviet Union s rapid economic moderniza@on such as the following: Collec@viza@on Five- Year Plans World War I debt, na@onalis@c tariff policies, overproduc@on, depreciated currencies, disrupted trade paderns, and specula@on created weaknesses in economies worldwide. February 27 908-915 885-893 The Great Depression, caused by weaknesses in interna5onal trade and monetary theories and prac5ces, undermined Western European democracies and fomented radical poli5cal responses throughout Europe. Dependence on post World War I American investment capital led to financial collapse when, following the 1929 stock market crash, the United States cut off capital flows to Europe. Despite adempts to rethink economic theories and policies and forge poli@cal alliances, Western democracies failed to overcome the Great Depression and were weakened by extremist movements. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of new economic theories and policies such as the following: Keynesianism in Britain Coopera@ve social ac@on in Scandinavia Popular Front policies in France Teachers have flexibility to use examples of poli@cal alliances such as the following: Na@onal government in Britain Popular Fronts in France and Spain

March 1 849-859 862-868 The conflic5ng goals of the peace nego5ators in Paris piged diploma5c idealism against the desire to punish Germany, producing a seglement that sa5sfied few. Wilsonian idealism clashed with postwar reali@es in both the victorious and the defeated states. Democra@c successor states emerged from former empires and eventually succumbed to significant poli@cal, economic, and diploma@c crises. Examples of democra@c successor states such as the following: Poland Czechoslovakia Hungary Yugoslavia The League of Na@ons, created to prevent future wars, was weakened from the outset by the nonpar@cipa@on of major powers, including the United States, Germany, and the Soviet Union. The Versailles sedlement, par@cularly its provisions on the assignment of guilt and repara@ons for the war, hindered the German Weimar Republic s ability to establish a stable and legi@mate poli@cal and economic system. Fascist dictatorships used modern technology and propaganda that rejected democra@c ins@tu@ons, promoted charisma@c leaders, and glorified war and na@onalism to lure the disillusioned. Friday March 3 909-919 886-891 895-904 The ideology of fascism, with roots in the pre World War I era, gained popularity in an environment of postwar bigerness, the rise of communism, uncertain transi5ons to democracy, and economic instability Mussolini and Hitler rose to power by exploi@ng postwar biderness and economic instability, using terror and manipula@ng the fledgling and unpopular democracies in their countries. Franco s alliance with Italian and German fascists in the Spanish Civil War in which the Western democracies did not intervene represented a tes@ng ground for World War II and resulted in authoritarian rule in Spain from 1936 to the mid- 1970s. AWer failures to establish func@oning democracies, authoritarian dictatorships took power in Central and Eastern Europe during the interwar period. Examples of authoritarian dictatorships in Central and Eastern Europe such as the following: Poland Hungary Romania

March 6 915-926 940-966 In the interwar period, fascism, extreme na5onalism, racist ideologies, and the failure of appeasement resulted in the catastrophe of World War II, presen5ng a grave challenge to European civiliza5on.. French and Bri@sh fears of another war, American isola@onism, and deep distrust between Western democra@c, capitalist na@ons and the communist Soviet Union allowed fascist states to rearm and expand their territory. Examples of fascist states expansion allowed by European powers such as the following: Remilitariza@on of the Rhineland Italian invasion of Ethiopia Annexa@on of Austria Munich Agreement and its viola@on Nazi Soviet Non- Aggression Pact Germany s Blitzkrieg warfare in Europe, combined with Japan s adacks in Asia and the Pacific, brought the Axis powers early victories. American and Bri@sh industrial, scien@fic, and technological power and the all- out military commitment of the USSR contributed cri@cally to the Allied victories. Fueled by racism and an@- Semi@sm, German Nazism sought to establish a new racial order in Europe, which culminated with the Holocaust.

Despite efforts to maintain interna@onal coopera@on through the newly created United Na@ons, deep- seated tensions between the USSR and the West led to the division of Europe, which was referred to in the West as the Iron Curtain. March 8 934-948 986-995 As World War II ended, a Cold War between the liberal democra5c West and the communist East began, las5ng nearly half a century. The Cold War played out on a global stage and involved propaganda campaigns; covert ac@ons; limited hot wars in Asia, Africa, La@n America, and the Caribbean; and an arms race, with the threat of a nuclear war. Examples of hot wars outside of Europe in which the U.S. and the USSR supported opposite sides such as the following: Korean War Vietnam War The Yom Kippur War The Afghanistan War The United States exerted a strong military, poli@cal, and economic influence in Western Europe, leading to the crea@on of world monetary and trade systems and geopoli@cal alliances such as the North Atlan@c Treaty Organiza@on (NATO). Examples of the world monetary and trade system such as the following: Interna@onal Monetary Fund (IMF) World Bank General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) World Trade Organiza@on (WTO)

Friday March 10 1003-1014 Spring Break March 20 992-1003 1008-1016 1014-1015 Eastern European na5ons were defined by their rela5onship with the Soviet Union, which oscillated between repression and limited reform, un5l Mikhail Gorbachev s policies led to the collapse of communist governments in Eastern Europe and the fall of the Soviet Union. Eastern European na5ons were defined by their rela5onship with the Soviet Union, which oscillated between repression and limited reform, un5l Mikhail Gorbachev s policies led to the collapse of communist governments in Eastern Europe and the fall of the Soviet Union. Stalin s economic moderniza@on of the Soviet Union came at a high price, including the liquida@on of the kulaks, famine in the Ukraine, purges of poli@cal rivals, unequal burdens placed on women, and the establishment of an oppressive poli@cal system. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of the Soviet Union s oppressive poli@cal system such as the following: Great Purges Gulags Secret police Countries east of the Iron Curtain came under the military, poli@cal, and economic domina@on of the Soviet Union within the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON) and the Warsaw Pact. Central and Eastern European na@ons within the Soviet bloc followed an economic model based on central planning, extensive social welfare, and specialized produc@on among bloc members. AWer 1956, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev s de- Staliniza@on policies failed to meet their economic goals within the Soviet Union and prompted revolts in Eastern Europe. Following a long period of economic stagna@on, Mikhail Gorbachev s internal reforms of perestroika and glasnost, designed to make the Soviet system more flexible, failed to stave off the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of its hegemonic control over Eastern and Central European satellites. The collapse of the USSR in 1991 ended the Cold War, and led to the establishment of capitalist economies throughout Eastern Europe. Germany was reunited, the Czechs and the Slovaks parted, Yugoslavia dissolved, and the European Union was enlarged through admission of former Eastern- bloc countries. The rise of new na@onalisms in Central and Eastern Europe brought peaceful revolu@on in most countries, but resulted in war and genocide in the Balkans and instability in some former Soviet republics.

At the end of World War I, President Woodrow Wilson s principle of na@onal self- determina@on raised expecta@ons in the non- European world for freedom from colonial domina@on, expecta@ons that led to interna@onal instability. March 22 996-1003 956-963 Friday March 24 1028-1034 944-948 The process of decoloniza5on occurred over the course of the century with varying degrees of coopera5on, interference, or resistance from European imperialist states. Postwar economic growth supported an increase in welfare benefits; however, subsequent economic stagna5on led to cri5cism and limita5on of the welfare state. The League of Na@ons distributed former German and Odoman possessions to France and Great Britain through the mandate system, thereby altering the imperial balance of power, and crea@ng a strategic interest in the Middle East and its oil. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of mandate territories such as the following: Lebanon and Syria Iraq Pales@ne Despite indigenous na@onalist movements, independence for many African and Asian territories was delayed un@l the mid- and even late 20th century by the imperial powers reluctance to relinquish control, threats of interference from other na@ons, unstable economic and poli@cal systems, and Cold War strategic alignments. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of indigenous na@onalist movements such as the following: Indian Na@onal Congress Algeria s Na@onal Libera@on Front (FLN) Ho Chi Minh s Viet Minh Sukarno in Indonesia Marshall Plan funds from the United States financed an extensive reconstruc@on of industry and infrastructure and s@mulated an extended period of growth in Western and Central Europe, owen referred to as an economic miracle, which increased the economic and cultural importance of consumerism. The expansion of cradle- to- grave social welfare programs in the awermath of World War II, accompanied by high taxes, became a conten@ous domes@c poli@cal issue as the budgets of European na@ons came under pressure in the late 20th century.

March 27 1015-1022 1048-1050 March 29 TBA In response to the destruc5ve impact of two world wars, European na5ons began to set aside na5onalism in favor of economic and poli5cal integra5on, forming a series of transna5onal unions that grew in size and scope over the second half of the 20th century. Na5onalist and separa5st movements, along with ethnic conflict and ethnic cleansing, periodically disrupted the post World War II peace. As the economic alliance known as the European Coal and Steel Community, envisioned as a means to spur postwar economic recovery, developed into the European Economic Community (EEC or Common Market) and the European Union (EU), Europe experienced increasing economic and poli@cal integra@on and efforts to establish a shared European iden@ty. One of the major con@nuing challenges to countries in the EU is balancing na@onal sovereignty with the responsibili@es of membership in an economic and poli@cal union. Examples of challenges to na@onal sovereignty within the EU such as the following: The crea@on of the euro The crea@on of a European parliament Free movement across borders Examples of na@onalist violence such as the following: Ireland Chechnya Separa@st movements such as the following: Basque (ETA) Flemish Examples of ethnic cleansing such as the following: Bosnian Muslims Albanian Muslims of Kosovo Friday March 31 Quiz on 4.1 & 4.2

Key Concept 4.3 During the 20th century, diverse intellectual and cultural movements ques5oned the existence of objec5ve knowledge, the ability of reason to arrive at truth, and the role of religion in determining moral standards. April 3 864-870 805-806 812-815 1034-1038 The widely held belief in progress characteris5c of much of 19th- century thought began to break down before World War I; the experience of war intensified a sense of anxiety that permeated many facets of thought and culture, giving way by the century s end to a plurality of intellectual frameworks. When World War I began, Europeans were generally confident in the ability of science and technology to address human needs and problems despite the uncertainty created by the new scien@fic theories and psychology. The effects of world war and economic depression undermined this confidence in science and human reason, giving impetus to existen@alism and producing postmodernism in the post- 1945 period.

New movements in the visual arts, architecture and music demolished exis@ng aesthe@c standards, explored subconscious and subjec@ve states, and sa@rized Western society and its values. April 5 806-812 870-880 Science and technology yielded impressive material benefits but also caused immense destruc5on and posed challenges to objec5ve knowledge. Examples of new movements in the visual arts such as the following: Cubism Futurism Dadaism Surrealism Abstract expressionism Pop Art Examples of new architectural movements such as the following: Bauhaus Modernism Postmodernism Examples of new movements in music such as the following: Composi@ons of Igor Stravinsky Composi@ons of Arnold Schoenberg Composi@ons of Richard Strauss Throughout the century, a number of writers challenged tradi@onal literary conven@ons, ques@oned Western values, and addressed controversial social and poli@cal issues. Examples of writers such as the following: Franz Kaqa James Joyce Erich Maria Remarque Virginia Woolf Jean- Paul Sartre

Increased imports of United States technology and popular culture awer World War II generated both enthusiasm and cri@cism. April 10 1043-1045 867 Palmer 1048-1052 Organized religion con5nued to play a role in European social and cultural life, despite the challenges of military and ideological conflict, modern secularism, and rapid social changes. The challenges of totalitarianism and communism in Central and Eastern Europe brought mixed responses from the Chris@an churches. Examples of Chris@an responses to totalitarianism such as the following: Dietrich Bonhoeffer Mar@n Niemöller Pope John Paul II Solidarity Reform in the Catholic Church found expression in the Second Va@can Council, which redefined the Church s dogma and prac@ces and started to redefine its rela@ons with other religious communi@es. Increased immigra@on into Europe altered Europe s religious makeup, causing debate and conflict over the role of religion in social and poli@cal life. April 12 Quiz on 4.3

Key Concept 4.4 Demographic changes, economic growth, total war, disrup5ons of tradi5onal social pagerns, and compe5ng defini5ons of freedom and jus5ce altered the experiences of everyday life. During the world wars, women became increasingly involved in military and poli@cal mobiliza@on, as well as in economic produc@on. In Western Europe through the efforts of feminists, and in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union through government policy, women finally gained the vote, greater educa@onal opportuni@es, and access to professional careers, even while con@nuing to face social inequali@es. Examples of feminists and feminism such as the following: Simone de Beauvoir Second Wave Feminism April 12 820-824 1031-1034 987-990 The lives of women were defined by family and work responsibili@es, economic changes, and feminism With economic recovery awer World War II, the birth rate increased drama@cally (the Baby Boom), owen promoted by government policies. Examples of government policies promo@ng popula@on growth such as the following: Neonatalism Subsidies for large families Child- care facili@es New modes of marriage, partnership, motherhood, divorce, and reproduc@on gave women more op@ons in their personal lives. Examples of new modes of managing reproduc@on such as the following: The pill Scien@fic means of fer@liza@on Women adained high poli@cal office and increased their representa@on in legisla@ve bodies in many na@ons. Good Friday Examples of women who adained high poli@cal office such as the following: Margaret Thatcher of Great Britain Mary Robinson of Ireland Edith Cresson of France

April 17 Spielvogel 947-958 The 20th century was characterized by large- scale suffering brought on by warfare and genocide as well as tremendous improvements in the standard of living. World War I created a lost genera@on, fostered disillusionment and cynicism, transformed the lives of women, and democra@zed socie@es. World War II decimated a genera@on of Russian and German men, virtually destroyed European Jewry, forced large- scale ethnic migra@ons, and undermined prewar class hierarchies. Mass produc@on, new food technologies, and industrial efficiency increased disposable income and created a consumer culture in which greater domes@c comforts, such as electricity, indoor plumbing, plas@cs, and synthe@c fibers became available. New communica@on and transporta@on technologies mul@plied the connec@ons across space and @me, transforming daily life and contribu@ng to the prolifera@on of ideas and to globaliza@on. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of new communica@on technologies such as the following: Telephone Radio Television Computer Cell phone Internet Green par@es in Western and Central Europe challenged consumerism, urged sustainable development, and, by the late 20th century, cau@oned against globaliza@on. April 19 991-992 1040 Friday April 21 New voices gained prominence in poli5cal, intellectual, and social discourse. Test on Period 4 Gay and lesbian movements worked for expanded civil rights, obtaining in some na@ons the right to form civil partnerships with full legal benefits or to marry. Intellectuals and youth reacted against perceived bourgeois materialism and decadence, most significantly with the revolts of 1968. Because of the economic growth of the 1950s and 1960s, numerous guest workers from southern Europe, Asia, and Africa immigrated to Western and Central Europe; however, awer the economic downturn of the 1970s, these workers and their families owen became targets of an@- immigrant agita@on and extreme na@onalist poli@cal par@es. Teachers have flexibility to use examples of an@- immigra@on, rightwing par@es such as the following: French Na@onal Front Austrian Freedom Party