“Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it...

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•“Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its devastation, displacement, and horror, was the result not just of a few madmen and their befuddled followers, not just of ‘others,” but of humanity as a whole and of out culture as a whole” (Eksteins, 13).

Transcript of “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it...

Page 1: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

• “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with

what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its devastation,

displacement, and horror, was the result not just of a few madmen and their befuddled

followers, not just of ‘others,” but of humanity as a whole and of out culture as a

whole” (Eksteins, 13).

Page 2: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

What is Europe now? A rubble heap, a charnel house, a breeding ground of pestilence and hate” –Winston Churchill

Page 3: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.
Page 4: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.
Page 5: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

Hiroshima: the pictures they didn’t want anyone to see

Page 6: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

“Winners have no shame, no matter how they win” –Machiavelli.

Page 7: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

“our historical sense is derived in turn from two directions: from the buildup that were the events of the pre-1945 past, with its inherent notions of

agency and cause, and from the confusions of our own end-of-century, end-of-millennium present, with its immediacy and contradiction” (Eksteins, x).

Page 8: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

Pre-WWII Build-Up

Post WWI effects: • introduction of total war/cult of the offensive• Russian Revolution • Economic Disaster with Great Depression• League of Nations• Rise of dictators and fascist states• Dissatisfied Germany

Page 9: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.
Page 10: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

“Europe After the Rain” –Max Ernst

Page 11: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

Europe 1919-1929

Page 12: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.
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“a radically new government, based on socialism and one-party dictatorship, came to power in a great European state, maintained power, and eagerly encouraged worldwide

revolution.”

Page 14: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

The Rise

The Rise of Dictators!

Page 15: “Before we can move forward, we must come to some kind of terms with 1945, with what it represents. A start would be the recognition that 1945, with its.

Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)

Originally a Marxist. By 1909 he was

convinced that a national rather than an international revolution was necessary.

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Mussolini Was Hitler’s Role Model

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Inter-War Years: Conflict and Cooperation

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Road to WWII

• Treaty of Versailles• Great Depression• Russian Revolution

http://www.worldology.com/Europe/europe_history_md.htm

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Picasso’s “Guernica”

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