Table of Contents:
LECTURE NOTES, GERMANY AND EUROPE, 1871-1945
HI 224
Raffael Scheck
- Germany under Napoleon
- Nationalism as a liberal cause
- The revolution of 1848
- Industrial take-off, 1850-1870
- Bismarck
- The wars against Denmark and Austria
- The Franco-German war
- The constitutional order
- The Junkers
- The South Germans
- The Catholics
- The liberals
- The workers
- The national minorities
- Living in the Empire
- Foreign policy
- The "New Course"
- New factors in foreign policy
- The "place in the sun"
- Basic options
- Tirpitz's commitment to battleships
- The navy laws
- Tirpitz's strategic program
- The domestic goals of the Tirpitz Plan
- The failure of the Tirpitz Plan
- Conclusions
- The Social Democrats
- The Jews
- The women's movement
- Conclusions
- The Importance of the War 1914-1918
- Germany in 1914
- The unfolding of events, 28 June to 4 August 1914
- Origins of the war
- German war guilt?
- Public reaction to war
- The initial operations
- The prospective of a long war
- Trench warfare
- German war tactics
- War aims
- The failure of compromise
- The home front
- Political origins of the revolution
- Social origins of the revolution
- The "incomplete" revolution
- Versailles and German expectations
- Wilson's Fourteen Points
- The peace conference
- Evaluation
- Weimar's failure in historical perspective
- The chaotic winter months 1918-1919
- The elections to the National Assembly
- The Constitution
- The Spartacist uprising
- Revolution in Munich
- Right-wing putschism
- Introduction
- The Communists
- The DNVP (German National People's Party)
- The NSDAP (German National Socialist Worker's Party)
- Central questions
- The role of women in the Nazi success
- Explanations for the failure of the Republic
- Concluding remarks
- Overview
- The start of Hitler's foreign policy
- France's commitment to defense
- Hitler's first successes
- Anti-Communist policy
- Anschluß and the Munich Conference
- Conclusions
- The start of World War II
- A war guilt question?
- Blitzkrieg
- The campaign in Russia
- The ideological underpinnings of the Russian campaign
- Total and global war, 1941 -1945
- Preconditions: Anti-Semitism and vulgar Darwinism
- The first phase of racist policies (1933-1938)
- Pogrom, resettlement, and expulsion of the Jews (1938-1941)
- The first extermination programs (1939-40)
- The destruction of European Jewry (1941-44)
- The debate on the genesis of the Holocaust
- Questions
- The Nazi state: strong dictatorship or polycratic chaos?
- Opportunities for resistance
- Living in the Third Reich: workers and women
- German rule in Europe
- Modernism and the Nazis
- German fascism?
- Totalitarianism
- Nazism as a German Peculiarity
- New beginnings
- Germany at the "Hour Zero"
- The aims of the victors
- Coming to terms with the past
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