Monday through Friday, April 7-11
Quiz#5 on Monday, 4/7.
Long periods: Independent research.
Day 1, Monday, 4/7: Quiz
In-class: Quiz#5
Homework#1: Read “Into the Fire
Again: World War II, 1939-1945,” in The West in the World, eds. Sherman/Salisbury,
pp. 711-721 (Up to ""Behind the Lines"), and answer the following question.
Key Terms and Persons: The
Popular Front, Chiang Kai-shek, Mao Zedong, Nanking, The Spanish Civil War, Guernica, The Axis Powers, The Anschluss, The Munich Conference of 1938,
Appeasement, Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact, blitzkrieg, the Battle of France, the Battle of Britain,
Operation Barbarossa, and Pearl Harbor.
Homework question: What were the origins of the Second World War?
What connections between Hitler, Nazism, and appeasement might have led to the
outbreak of war?
Day 2: The Road to War.
In-class: Discuss the origins and early stages of the Second World War.
Homework#2: Read “Into the Fire
Again: World War II, 1939-1945,” in The West in the World, eds. Sherman/Salisbury,
pp. 721-733, and answer the following question.
Key Terms: The
Holocaust (Shoah), Death camps, Stalingrad, the Battle of Midway, kamikaze, the atomic
bomb, and the United Nations.
Homework question: How did the Allies turn the tide and defeat the Axis powers in the Second World War - what were the key actions and turning points?
Day 3: The Second World War.
In-class: Discuss the key actions and turning points of the war.
Homework#3: Read the handout: Christopher Browning, "One Day in Jozefow," and answer the following question.
Homework question: Who were the men in the Order Police, what did they do in Jozefow, and what does this suggest about the Holocaust?
Day 4: The Holocaust.
In-class: Read the handout of the interview with Daniel J. Goldhagen; discuss the debates over the origins of the Holocaust and its legacies in world history.
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