Monday through Friday, April 28- May 2, 2014
Long periods: Time to work on oral history research and capstone projects.
Quiz#6 on Friday, 5/2; covers the readings, class discussions and notes on the Holocaust, the legacies of the Second World War, and the Cold War.
Day 1, Monday, April 28: The Cold War
In-class: Read and discuss two primary source handouts in class: 1. US Secretary of War Henry Stimson Appeals for Atomic Talks, 1945, and 2. Diplomat George Kennan Advocates Containment, 1946. Continue discussions of week 14's readings and homework questions on the Cold War (homework will be checked).
Homework#1: Read the primary and secondary source handouts on the Cold War; use the SOAPSTONE rubric to analyze and take notes on the primary sources; for the secondary sources, take notes on the argument, evidence and whether or not you buy the argument.
Primary source#1: The Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan, 1947.
Primary source#2: B. N. Ponomaryov, "The Cold War: A Soviet Perspective," 1960.
Primary source#3: Jens Reich, "The Berlin Wall," 1990.
Secondary source#1: James L. Gormly, "Origins of the Cold War".
Day 2: Decolonization
In-class: Wrap up discussions of the Cold War, and discuss the related source materials.
Homework#2: Read “The Twilight of
Colonialism,” in The West in the World, eds. Sherman/Salisbury,
pp. 752-757.
Key Terms and Persons: Apartheid,
decolonization, postcolonialism, Gandhi, Satyagraha, nonviolence, Ho Chi Minh,
Dien Bien Phu, and Kwame Nkrumah.
Homework Question#1: What was decolonization? What were the reasons for the
end of European colonial rule, and what were some of the arguments made and the
strategies used in the struggle over decolonization?
Homework question#2: What role did the United
Nations and the Cold War, i.e., the US and USSR, play in this struggle?
Homework question#3: What
were the consequences of decolonization and the legacies of colonial rule?
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