The Cold War: Europe between the US and the USSR

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UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER SPRING 2018 IR231 The Cold War: Europe between the US and the USSR Place: Morey 205/Goergen 109 Annamaria Orla-Bukowska, PhD Time: Tuesdays & Thursdays Office: Harkness Hall 101 15:25-16:40 Tel: 275-1677, 275-9898 Office Hours: Tue & Wed, 14:00-15:00 Email: aorlabu2@ur.rochester.edu Description: The Cold War is typically seen as a political struggle between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., yet it was played out on and directly affected the peoples of Europe Western, Central and Eastern. Through the prism of its societies, the course will trace the splitting of the continent, the deepening divides, and the overriding consequences for states across Europe. From a sociopolitical perspective focused especially on Central Europe, we will analyze the most dramatic and significant turning points such as the Berlin Airlift in 1949 and the Polish Solidarity strikes in 1980. We will survey internal as well as external, actions and reactions spanning nearly five decades until the implosion of the entire communist system between 1989 and 1991. The course will close with a look at currently rising tensions between Europe and Russia, already referred to as a new Cold War. General Announcements: On the dates of our three film-screening sessions the last Tuesday of each month in February, March & April class will be held later and in a different venue. The 2.5 hour screening & discussion will be on February 27, March 27, and April 24, from 6:15-8:15PM in Goergen 109. Once a month on Thursday, 15 February (1940s&50s); Thursday, 8 March (1960s&70s); and Thursday, 17 April (1980s&90s) the class meeting will be dedicated to a team presentation of a 2-decade timeline of key events. A closer look will be on the split city of Berlin with subsequent periods of the Cold War analyzed through the prism of this singularly symbolic city. Student teams will be responsible for a powerpoint or other visual presentation (approx. 20 minutes per team) to be narrated equally by all members of the team. Discussion will follow. To prevent technological mishaps, the visual file MUST be emailed to me by 12 noon on the day of the presentation; it will be downloaded onto my computer and ready to go at the start of class time. The course textbook is Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 by Tony Judt. A full syllabus with exact page assignments for consecutive weeks follows below. Additional reading materials should be considered (unless otherwise specified) as highly recommended for the final. This syllabus as well as materials which we accumulate over the semester will also be available on Blackboard.

Course requirements: Participation: Students are expected to contribute actively to our meetings; this will influence the final grade. All students are required to attend each class: students who miss more than five meetings without a serious and explicit reason cannot expect to pass, regardless of how well they do in other course requirements. One class can be missed without excuse; each subsequent absence will incur a 2 percent lowering of the final grade. Attendance and participation accounts for 15 percent of the course grade. Reading assignments: Students are required to read the assigned pages from the textbook as specified. Recommended, supplementary materials from this syllabus or of the students choosing are highly encouraged throughout the semester. Examinations: Each student will choose (or be assigned to) a timeline team, responsible for a particular Cold War decade. Two teams will do presentations on the designated dates in February, March and April; performance in this activity will account for 10 percent of the course grade. The mid-term examination will be held on Thursday, 20 March (60 minutes; multiple choice, short answer & matching columns), accounting for 25 percent of the course grade. The final examination, accounting for 50 percent of the course grade, will be a cumulative, open book examination you may use any and all hard copy notes and sources (multiple choice, short answer, matching columns & essays). Week One Understanding the European Continent as God s Playground 1. January 18 Assignment: Review 18th-19th century European history to get a grasp of how the continent got conceptually as well as physically divided. North, South, East, West: which countries are today assigned to which compass point? What is the political and civilizational geography of the continent? Especially look at the role of modern history in Central and Eastern Europe: empires versus nations, subjects versus citizens, groups versus individuals, and multiculturalism versus monoculturalism. 2. January 23 Discussion: What historical, geopolitical, and social circumstances led Hitler and Stalin feel that they could carve up Central Europe between them? What eased the way for Churchill and Roosevelt to hand this region over to the Soviet Union in exchange for the end of WWII? Davies, N., Europe: A History skim Chapters VIII-X for history of formation of nation states in West and empires in the east, read Chapter XII (1057-1117, up to Integration and Disintegration, 1985-1991) for background of the Cold War period Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Introduction, 1-10 Week Two The Re-Dividing of Europe 3. January 25 The legacy of Yalta, Tehran, and Potsdam: The establishment of the communist states in Europe after WWII. Communism versus democracy/capitalism; NATO & the budding EEC, the Warsaw Pact & Comecon. Totalitarian politics and the centrally planned economy

4. January 30 Symbolic ruins, reconstruction, new constructions: Reichstag, Dresden, Warsaw, and Nowa Huta Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter III: The Rehabilitation of Europe, 82-99; Chapter IV: The Impossible Settlement, 100-128 Gaddis, J.L., We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History Chapter 2: Cold War Empires: Europe Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part I, Chapters 1, 2 and 5 Week Three Negotiating Central Europe 5. February 1 The Dividing and Divided Germany: Eliminating Perceived and Real Threats of Germany, of the Soviet Union 6. February 6 Negotiating buffer states: Yugoslavia, Austria, Albania & Romania. How Tito managed to satisfy both West and East, how Austria broke away from the Soviet Union, and how Albania and Romania forged their own path Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter V: The Coming of the Cold War, 129-181; Chapter VIII: The Politics of Stability, 241-247, 260-265 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part I, Chapters 10 and 13 Week Four The Soviet Bloc: The first decades thru a Polish Looking Glass 7. February 8 Case Study Poland under communism, 1944-1956. Eastern Europe under Soviet grip, the Cold War on two sides, and the first cracks appear in the political-economic system 8. February 13 Protesting in the Soviet Paradise: Berlin, Poznań, Budapest Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter VI: Into the Whirlwind, 187-196 Week Five The Divided City, Country & Continent: The first decades 9. February 15 Presentations The 1940s and 1950s (focus on Berlin) 10. February 20 The sociopolitical role of religion in Europe. Separation of church and state and secularization in the West vis-à-vis churches battling states and increased religiosity in the East

Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Coda: The End of Old Europe, 226-237; Chapter VIII: The Politics of Stability, 247-260 Gaddis, J.L., We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History Chapter 5: The German Question, 113-151 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part I, Chapter 14 Week Six Freezes & Thaws in the Cold War 11. February 22 Solidification accompanied by loosening of the divides; shifts, renegotiations, changes in fault lines; proxy wars emerging 12. February 27 CHANGE OF TIME & VENUE Goergen 109, 6:15-8:15 Film Screening: Krisztina Goda, Children of Glory (Szabadság, szerelem), Hungary 2006 (123 minutes) Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter IX: Lost Illusions, 309-323 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part II, Chapter 29 Week Seven Economic, Military, and Political Alliances in Action 13. March 1 The military alliances: The effects of Israel s 6-Day War on Cold War politics 14. March 6 Economic booms and failures: the beginnings of the European Union, the cementing of Soviet friendships Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XV: Politics in a New Key, 484-503 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part I, Chapters 7, 8, 12; 15; Part II, Chapter 24, 26, 32 Week Eight Upheavals: Returning to Berlin, East and West 15. March 8 Presentations The 1960s and 1970s (focus on Berlin) 16. March 20 Midterm Examination SPRING BREAK no classes on 13 & 15 March Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XVI: A Time of Transition, 504-534

Week Nine Détente: The US & USSR vis-à-vis Europe 17. March 22 The gains and losses, the advantages and disadvantages of détente for Europe, East and West 18. March 27 CHANGE OF TIME & VENUE Goergen 109, 6:15-8:15 Film Screening: Jan Sverak, Kolya (Kolja), Czech Republic 1996 (105 minutes) Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XIII: The End of the Affair, 422-449; Chapter XIX: The End of the Old Order, 585-633 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part III, Chapter 37; Part IV, Chapter 51 Week Ten Human Rights across the Continent 19. March 29 Protest in the West: 1968 and Human Rights under democracy 20. April 3 Protest in the East: 1968 and Human Rights under communism Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XII: The Spectre of Revolution, 390-421 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part III, Chapter 48; Part IV, Chapter 57 Week Eleven Of Spies and Sports 21. April 6 The Information Cold War 22. April 8 The Sports War Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XXIV: Europe as a Way of Life, 777-787 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part V, Chapter 72 Week Twelve The End in Sight 23. April 13 Poland: Solidarity, Martial Law and the June 1989 Elections 24. April 17 Presentations The 1980s and 1900s (focus on Berlin) Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XX: A Fissile Continent, 637-664

Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part V, Chapter 67; Part VI, Chapter 76 Week Thirteen Reunification of city, country & continent: Falling walls 25. April 19 The reunification of Germany & Berlin (moving & reconstructing the capital city); new members in old clubs (NATO, the EU) 26. April 24 CHANGE OF TIME & VENUE Goergen 109, 6:15-8:15 Film Screening: Wolfgang Becker, Goodbye Lenin, Germany 2003 (121 minutes) Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XXIII: The Varieties of Europe, 768-776 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part VI, Chapter 75, 80 Week Fourteen The End in Sight 27. April 26 The New Cold War: The Old, New European (dis)union vs. Russia 28. May 1 Reviewing the Past, Viewing the Future: Democracies or Despotisms? Judt, T., Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 Chapter XXIV: Europe as a Way of Life, 787-800 Gaddis, J.L., We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History Chapter 10: The New Cold War History: First Impressions, 281-295 Judge, E.H.; Langdon, J.W, The Cold War: A History through Documents Part VI, Chapter 85, 86 CUMULATIVE, OPEN BOOK FINAL EXAMINATION