카테고리 보관물: Uncategorized

Lecture Week 2

LECTURE  2:

Adolf Hitler:  Portrait of an Artist as Young Man &
The Roots and Founding of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP)


·        Adolf Hitler (1889 – 1945)

·        Alois Schickelgruber

·        Vienna

·        Ostara

·        Munich

·        16th Bavarian Infantry Regiment “List”

·        November 9th Revolution (1918)

·        “Stab in the Back”

·        Friedrich Ebert (1871 – 1925)

·        SPD — German Social Democrat Party  — (Socialdemokratische Partei  Deutschlands)

·        Spartacists

·        KPD — German Communist Party (Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands)

·        Rosa Luxemburg

·        Freikorps – Free Corps

·        Weimar Constitution – Weimar Republic

·        Article 48

·        Reichstag

·        proportional representation

·        NSDAPNationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei – (Nazi)–  (National Socialist German Workers’ Party)

·        Versailles Treaty

·        Twenty-Five Points – February 3, 1920  [ Link ]  updated

·        Rudolf Hess (1894-1987)

·        Dietrich Eckart (1868-1923)

·        SA (Sturmabteilung) Storm Troopers

·        Thule Society

·        hyperinflation

·        Ruhr occupation

·        Beer Hall Putsch – November 8-9, 1923

·        Eric Ludendorff

·        Mein Kampf  (My Struggle)

·        Fuhrer

·        Volkische Beobachter

·        Blood Flag – Blood Banner

·        Julies Streicher (1885 – 1946)

·        Der Sturmer

·        Alfred Rosenberg (1893 – 1946)

·        Protocols of the Learned  Elders of Zion

NSDAP Memberships Numbers

1919: 500 (estimated)

1920: 3,000

1921: 6,000

1922: 10,000

1923: 35,000 (Jan)

1923: 55,000 (Nov)

1924: ?

1925: 27,000

Suggested Readings – Sources:

Peter Fritzsche, Germans into Nazis

Roderick Stackelber, Hitler’s Germany:  Origins, Interpretations, Legacies

Conan Fischer, ed., The Rise of National Socialism and the Working Classes in Weimar Germany

Richard J. Evans, The Coming of the Third Reich

Joachim Fest, Hitler 

Karl Dietrich Bracher, The German Dictatorship

Jackson J Spielvogel, Hitler and Nazi Germany

Eugene Davidson, The Making of Adolf Hitler

Konrad Heiden, The Fuhrer

David Lewis, The Man Who Invented Hitler

Lothar Machtan, The Hidden Hitler

Robert Waite, The Psychopathic God Adolf Hitler

Peter Levenda, Unholy Alliance:  A History of Nazi Involvement With the Occult

Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, The Occult Roots of Nazism:  The Ariosophists of Austria and Germany 1890-1935 

Peter Padfield, Hess:  The Fuhrer’s Deputy

Lecture 7

LECTURE  7:   Building the Racial State

RACIAL HYGIENE – EUGENICS

Racial Hygiene

Human Betterment Foundation – USA

Eugenics

Compulsory Sterilization

Alberta Eugenics Board — compulsory sterilization of 2,832 Canadians (1929 -1972)  

Law for the Prevention of Genetically Diseased Offspring (July 14, 1933) — taking effect January 1, 1934

Hereditary Health Courts

Alfred Hoche & Karl Binding, Authorization of the Destruction of Life Unworthy of Life (1920)

Karl Brandt

Philip Bouhler

Aktion T-4

Christian Wirth (“The Savage Christian”)

RSHA V D 2   Criminal Technical Institute Department of Forensic Chemistry

Aktion 14f13

Bishop of Munster, Clemens August Graf von Galen

70,273  Aktion

T-4 victims by August 1941 

(a total of 150,000-300,000 possible total victims through continued “unofficial” euthanasia after August 1941 and

Aktion 14f13 estimated by end of war)

A BRIEF HISTORY OF ANTISEMITISM

antisemitism vs Anti-Semitism [LINK]

Antisemitism

·        Primitive classic

·        Fratricidal

·        Christian redemptive

·        Secular racist

·        Nationalist eliminationist

·        National Socialist exterminationst

Apollonius Molon, The Diatribe Against the Jews  (120 BCE)

Hellenization

Second Temple

Masada

Arch of Titus

zealots

Constantine

Council of Nicaea, 325 CE 

anti-Jewish canonical laws

Martin Luther  Concerning the Jews and Their Lies  (1543)

Napoleon

Emancipation of the Jews

Wilhelm Marr Der Weg zum Siege des Germanentums über das Judentum (The Way to Victory of Germanicism over Judaism) 1879


ANTISEMITIC LAW AND REGULATION IN THE THIRD REICH

Destruction of European Jews, Raul Hilberg

1.     Definition and Identification

2.     Expropriation

3.     Deportation and Concentration

4.     Extermination

 

  • Decree for the Re-establishment of a Professional Civil Service of April 7, 1933

  • Law Against Overcrowding in German Schools and Universities,  April 25, 1933

  • Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor  September 15, 1935  (“Blood Laws” or “Nuremberg Laws)

Reich Citizenship Law, November 14, 1935  (Defines “Jew”)

A Jew is:

·        A.  descended from at least three Jewish grandparents (Full or ¾ Jew)

·        B.  A Half-Jew descended from two Jewish grandparents, and:

·        a) Belonging to the Jewish community on or after September 15, 1935; or

·        b) married to a Jew on or after September 15, 1935; or

·        c) an offspring of a marriage contracted with a ¾ or full Jew after the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor came into effect (September 15, 1935); or

·        d) an offspring of an extramarital relationship with a ¾ or full Jew and born out of wedlock after July 31, 1936.

A Half Jew – (a Mischlinge ) is:

  ·        anyone who descended from two Jewish grandparents but who:

    A) did not adhere to the Jewish religion on or before Sept 15

     and

     B) was not married to a Jew

    and is classified as Mischlinge of the first degree

  •   anyone who descended from one Jewish grandparent,
      is classified as Mischlinge of the second degree

Mischlinge of the first degree

Mischlinge of the second degree

Jewish Enterprise

Aryanization

Evian Conference

IV B 4

Adolf Eichmann

Swiss-Austrian Visa Treaty

Kristalnacht

Atonement Tax

Flight Tax

SOURCES MENTIONED IN LECTURE

Rosemary Radford Ruether, Faith and Fratricide:  The Theological Roots of Anti-Semitism, New York:  Seabury Press, 1974.

Rosemary Radford Ruether, in Eva Fleischner (editor),“Antisemitism and Christian Theology”, in Auschwitz:  Beginning of a New Era? New York:  KTAV Publishing, 1977.

Kenneth Stow “Hatred of the Jews or Love of the Church:  Papal Policy Towards the Jews in the Middle Ages” in Shmuel Almog (ed), Antisemitism Through the Ages, New York:  Pergamon Press, 1988.

Goldhagen, Daniel Johan, Hitler’s Willing Executioners:  Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, New York:  Alfred A. Knopf, 1996  

Gordon, Sarah, Hitler, Germans and the “Jewish Question”, Princeton, NJ:  Princeton University Press, 1984.

Volkov, Shulamit, “The Written Word and Spoken Word:  On the Gap Between Pre-1914 and Nazi Anti-Semitism” in Furet, Francois, (ed), Unanswered Questions:  Nazi Germany and the Genocide of the Jews, New York:  Schocken Books, 1989. pp. 33-53

ADDITIONAL READINGS

Becker, Elizabeth, When The War Was Over:  Cambodia’s Revolution and the Voices of its People, New York:  Simon & Schuster, 1986

Burleigh, Michael, Death and Deliverance: ‘Euthanasia’ In Germany 1900-1945, Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 1994. 

Frend, W.H.C, Martydom and Persecution in the Early Church:  A Study of Conflict from the Maccabees to Donatus, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1965.

Furet, Francois, (ed), Unanswered Questions:  Nazi Germany and the Genocide of the Jews, New York:  Schocken Books, 1989.

Gordon, Sarah, Hitler, Germans and the “Jewish Question”, Princeton, NJ:  Princeton University Press, 1984

Gourevitch, Philip, We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families:  Stories From Rwanda, New York:  Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998

Gramal Hermann, Antisemitims in the Third Reich, London:  Blackwell, 1988.

Grant, Michael, The Jews in the Roman World, London:  Phoenix, 1973. 

Heer, Friedrich, God’s First Love:  Christians and Jews Over Two Thousand Years, London:  Phoenix, 1970. 

Hilberg, Raul, The Destruction of the European Jews, New York: Holmes & Meier, 1985.

Hsia, Po-Chia R., The Myth of Ritual Murder:  Jews and Magic in Reformation Germany, New Haven:  Yale University Press, 1988.

International Military Tribunal, Trials of the Major War Criminals, Washington, D.C.: 1947-49.

Kuernemud, Richard, Arminius or the Rise of a National Symbol in Literature From Hutten to Grabbe, Chapel Hill, NC:  University of North Carolina, 1953.

Küng, Hans, Judaism: Between Yesterday and Today, New York:  Crossroad, 1992.

Lindemann, Albert S., Esau’s Tears:  Modern Antisemitism and the Rise of Jews, Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 1997. 

Littell, Franklin H., The Crucifixion of the Jews, New York:  Harper & Row, 1975.

MacLennan, Early Christian Texts on Jews and Judaism,  Atlanta GA:  Scholars Press, 1990.

Oberman, Heiko A., The Roots of Anti-Semeitism In the Age of Renaissance and Reformation, Philadelphia:  Fortress Press, 1981.

Olster, David M., Roman Defeat, Christian Response, and the Literary Construction of the Jew, Philadelphia:  University of Pennsylvania Press, 1994.

Proctor, Robert N., Racial Hygiene:  Medicine Under the Nazis, Cambridge, MA:  Harvard University Press, 1988

Ruether, Rosemary Radford, Faith and Fratricide:  The Theological Roots of Anti-Semitism, New York:  Seabury Press, 1974. 

Sax, Boria, Animals in the Third Reich:  Pets, Scapegoats, and the Holocaust, New York:  Continuum, 2000.

Schama, Simon, Landscape and Memory, New York:  Vintage Books, 1995.

Schellhase, Kenneth, Tacitus in Renaissance Political Thought, Chicago:  University of Chicago Press, 1976

Steinman, Lionel B., Paths to Genocide: Antisemitism in Western History, New York:  St. Martin’s Press, 1998.  

Weiss, John, The Ideology of Death:  Why the Holocaust Happened in Germany, Chicago:  Ivan R Dee, 1996.

Weomreich, Max, Hitler’s Professors:  The Part of Scholarship In Germany’s Crimes Against the Jewish People, New Haven:  Yale University Press, 1999.

Wilken, Robert L.,  Judaism and the Early Christian Mind,  London:  University of Oxford Press, 1971.

Lecture Week 9

  • General Hans von Seeckt

  • Army Regulation 487:  Leadership and Battle With Combined Arms  (1921-1923)

  • panzer

  • JU-87 Stuka

  • J.F.C. Fuller The Foundations of the Science of War

  • Mark I, Mark II, Mark III, Mark IV, Mark V Panther, Mark VI Tiger

  • Ghetto

  • Hans Frank

  • Adam Czerniakow –Chairman Warsaw Ghetto

  • Modacai Chaim Rumkowski –

    Chairman

    Lodz Ghetto

     

  • Madagascar Plan

    FURTHER READINGS and SOURCES

The Red Army and the Wehrmacht:  How the Soviets Militarized Germany 1922-33
Dyakov, Yuri & Bushuyeva, Tatyana
Prometheus Books, 1995.

The Roots of Blitzkrieg:  Hans von Seeckt and German Military Reform
Corum, James S.
University Press of Kansas, 1992

The Blitzkrieg Myth:  How Hitler and the Allies Misread the Strategic Realities of World War II
Mosier, John
HarperCollins / Perennial, 2004

Guderian:  Creator of the Blitzkrieg
Macksey, Kenneth Stein and Day, 1976. 

Nazi Foreign Policy, 1933-1941 :The Road to Global War 

Leitz, Christian, Routledge, 2004.

Hitler’s Foreign Policy 1933-1939 : The Road to World War II 

Weinberg, Gerhard L. Enigma, 2004. 

What Hitler Knew : The Battle for Information in Nazi Foreign Policy 

Shore, Zachary  Oxford University Press, 2003.

The Diplomacy of the “New Order” : The Foreign Policy of Japan, Germany and Italy: 1931-1945 

Stam, Arthur  Aspekt, 2003. 

Ribbentrop 

Bloch, Michael  Abacus, 2002. 

Hitler’s Spies:  German Military Intelligence in World War II
Kahn, David

Macmillan, 1978.

The Schellenberg Memoirs:  A Record of the Nazi Secret Service
Schellenberg, Walter 

Andre Deutsch, 1956.  (other editions published subsequently including abridged paperbacks)

Saboteurs:  The Nazi Raid on America
Dobbs, Michael Vintage, 2005

Hitler’s Undercover War:  The Nazi Espionage Invasion of the USABreuer, William

St. Martin’s Press, 1989.

Shadow Enemies:  Hitler’s Secret Terrorist Plot Against the United StatesAbella, Alex & Gordon, Scott

Lyons Press, 2002

CHST 603 COURSE OUTLINE

CHST 603

HISTORY OF THE THIRD REICH

Course Outline – Summer 2010

INSTRUCTOR:                     Peter Wronski

OFFICE:                               JOR 501  (Office Hours:  Mon:  5:15 – 6:15 P.M. & Wed: 12:00 – 1:00 P.M. & by appointment)                

INSTRUCTOR PHONE:     (416) 979-5000 x.6058                   

INSTRUCTOR E-MAIL:       pwronsky@ryerson.ca  [best way to contact]                             

WEBSITE:                             http://www.petervronsky.com/thirdreich.htm    OR www.russianbooks.org/thirdreich.htm

LECTURES:                         Mondays & Wednesdays, 23 June 2010 – 11 August  2010, 9:00 A.M.  – 12:00  EPH 441                   

The Chang School Office Hours:             Mon-Thurs    8:00am – 7:00pm

Phone:  (416) 979-5035                                     Friday 8:00am – 4:30pm

COURSE DESCRIPTION / OBJECTIVE

More than sixty years after its destruction by the Allied armies, Hitler’s Germany still manages to arouse both controversy and curiosity. Was the Nazi state rooted in the German past, or rather the product of modern crises that could overwhelm any nation? This course combines a chronological, biographical and thematic approach to explaining the history of the Third Reich.  The course covers Germany’s historical roots leading to the emergence of the National Socialist Party, the rise of Hitler and his henchmen to power, the rise and fall of the Third Reich’s totalitarian-racial police state and Nazi criminality in warfare, occupation policy and genocide.   

The objectives of this course are:  1. To examine the Third Reich in its contemporary setting and to establish a factual framework for its history; 2. To understand the relationship between National Socialism and the conduct of foreign and domestic policy; 3. To improve your ability to think critically and to analyze data by undertaking the kind of research required for an upper level university essay or a professional or academic report or publication and to write and present it clearly and effectively.

(Upper-level liberal studies elective)   

WARNING:  Lectures may feature graphic images that some may find disturbing.

TEXTS (both required and available at the Ryerson book store)

Klaus P. Fischer, Nazi Germany:  A New History, (New York:  Continuum, 1995.)

           
Christopher R. Browning, Ordinary Men:  Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland, (New York:  HarperPerennial, 1998.)  [second edition]

METHOD OF STUDENT EVALUATION           

Mid-Term Test:                                 15%     July 12  (Chapters 1 to 8; to August 1934)

Essay Proposal (250 words):         10%     July 19                       

Essay (2500 words):                        30%     Aug  4

Final Exam:                                       30%     Aug 11

Seminars:                                          15%    Jul 7; July 26; Aug 9

METHOD OF INSTRUCTION:      Lecture & Seminar

TENTATIVE LECTURE SCHEDULE (see website for more lecture content)

  1. Introduction to History of the Third Reic

    h

  2. Roots of the Third Reich                           

    1871 – 1919             

  3. Struggle for Power                                       1920 – 1932             

  4. Seizure of Power                                        

    1933 – 1934             

  5. Consolidation of Power                             

    1934 – 1939

  6. The Nazi Revolutionary State                      1933 – 1936

  7. From Appeasement to Blitzkrieg              

    1936 – 1941 

  8. Germany at Total War                                

    1941 – 1943

  9. The Making of the Racial State                

    1933 – 1940

  10. The Final Solution                                      

    1941 – 1944

  11. Fall of the Third Reich                               

    1944 – 1945

  12. Aftermath                                                      

    1945 – 200

    9

  13. Final Exam                    

SEMINARS:

Three one-hour seminars will be held in the semester based on lecture material and assigned readings.  These will be held in the last hour of a regularly scheduled lecture period. Attendance is mandatory.  Seminar mark is 15% of the final grade and based on attendance and quality of participation.

ESSAY ASSIGNMENTS

There are two parts to the essay assignment:  the outline and the essay.

Part 1:  The Essay Proposal

The outline should consist of one double-spaced page with a description of your proposed essay, an argument if you have one and/or your approach to the subject and its significance to the course if not immediately evident.  (Approximately 250 words.)

A one or two page annotated bibliography  of six sources at least should accompany the essay description. This should consist of the author, title, publisher, city, and year of publication of the book, journal article, or other source and a short commentary on what the source offers to your essayOutlines submitted with no annotations to the bibliography will be heavily penalized. Sources should be current academic monographs or academic journal articles — not popular works like Time-Life Books, Complete Idiot’s or Dummies Guides, Colliers Children’s Encyclopedia, Encarta, Wikipedia, Historyplace.com, etc. Journalistic works with citations are acceptable. In general, if your source does not provide detailed references in the form of footnotes, endnotes or specific page references, which you can verify, it is unsuitable as a source.  This especially applies to websites.  If you intend to include websites, provide their URLs in the proposal for approval.  No essay can be entirely based on websites without permission from the instructor.  (“Websites” does not mean internet databases of journal articles like MUSE or JSTOR, for example.) 

You will be assessed on the uniqueness of your topic and on the depth, currency and academic quality of your sources.  The use of academic journal articles, many of which are available online through the Ryerson Library is highly encouraged.  If you are not familiar with academic article databases like JSTOR and Project Muse, go (run!) immediately to a librarian at the Ryerson Library and ask them to show you how to use these databases.  You can access them from home and many (but not all) articles are available for downloading in full text. A link on the course website also provides you an introduction as to how to enter the online journal interface.

You may at any time after submitting a proposal, change your approach, your sources, and even completely change your essay topic without submitting a new proposal, but I strongly suggest to check with me first on such topic changes.

Part 2:  The Essay (30%)

Essays should be 2,500 words in length (approximately 10-12 pages not including your title page and bibliography and appendix if any.)  Standard 12 pt font, cursive or non-cursive, double spaced text, standard 2.5 cm margins, 11” X 8 ½” paper.  Pages must be stapled (no binders or paperclips), paginated, and submitted with a cover page containing no art or decorative elements.  The cover page must have:  your name, student number, course number, and essay titleEssays not conforming to these standards will not be accepted and late penalties will be imposed until the essay is resubmitted in the required format.

Essays must be based on a minimum of six sources (not including course texts but seminar readings are acceptable), and should not include, encyclopedias, textbooks, or general or popular histories,  or unapproved websites, (2 marks deducted for every Wikipedia or like citation) etc., as described above in Part 1.    

Paragraphs are to be indented without any additional spaces between paragraphs, unlike in this course outline, for example.  Any relevant images, maps, graphs included in the essay are to be placed into an Appendix at the back. 

The essay should have a single descriptive title or a creative title with a descriptive subtitle.  For example:  Generals in Blue:  Lives of the Union Commanders or The Architect of Genocide:  Himmler and the Final Solution, etc.   “History Essay” is not a title.  Marks will be deducted for essays submitted without a title and/or title page. 

Any paper not conforming to the above standards will be penalized.

Students must sequentially ‘save as’ copies of their essay files every day during the period they are researching,  writing and editing their essay at a sufficiently frequent rate daily to demonstrate the progression and development of their essay over the arc of its writing, if requested.  There should be a minimum of ten saved files available from the start to finish of the essay.  Students should save as well as their library references, hand written notes, and any other research material until the issuance of the final course mark.

Citations

A history essay is like a courtroom argument—it is based on the presentation of evidence conforming with the rules of evidence in an expositive argument.  The way hearsay is not admissible in court, Wikipedia for example, is likewise not admissible as evidence in historical discourse.  Just as court evidence is presented in a disciplined system: Exhibit A, Exhibit B, Exhibit C, etc, in the historical argument, the Chicago Style footnoted citation is used to lead and guide the reader through the evidence behind the persuasive discourse of the text above.

Some of the journal readings for seminars will have been pointed out to you as appropriate models for the citation style required for your essay.

Essays must have a bibliography and have footnoted citations in the Chicago style (at the bottom of the page).  Parenthetic in-text or inline style citations are unacceptable for a history essay.   A well researched essay integrating multiple sources into its argument contains on average five to six citations per page — approximately 50 to 70 citations per essay.

As a general rule, references should be given for direct quotations, summaries or your own paraphrases of other people’s work or points of view, and for material that is factual, statistical, controversial, assertive or obscure.  You must cite more than just direct quotes.  WHEN IN DOUBT, IT IS BETTER TO PROVIDE A REFERENCE.  You do not need to cite items of general knowledge like, for example:  the sun rises in the east or Elizabeth II is the Queen of England.  

Essays that do not provide specific page references in each citation will be automatically failed without an opportunity to resubmit.  Go to these links for a guide to the required citation format:

http://www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/p04_c10_s1.html

Why Chicago Style Footnotes? http://www.yale.edu/bass/writing/sources/kinds/principles/why.html 

This is an example of the basic required style for citations which are to inserted at the bottom of each page:
 
1 Jane Doe, The ABC’s of History (Toronto: Ontario Publishers, 1997), pp. 20-21
2
Jane Doe, p. 23

It is not necessary to use archaic terms like ibid or op cit. and even discouraged as   word processing drag or cut-and-paste editing can easily displace the logic of these citation terms.   An author’s surname and page number is acceptable for subsequent citations once you have introduced all the relevant reference information in the first citation to that particular source. If you are citing more than one work by the same author, then include the title as well.  Titles are to be put into italics or underlined.  See the above webpages for further details and formats as to how to cite journals, multiple authors, collections, etc. or search “Chicago style footnotes” on Google. To create numerically sequential footnotes in MS WORD 2007 go to the “References” ribbon and select [Insert Footnote]; in earlier version of MS WORD, go to the “Insert” menu and then select [Footnote] item.

Footnotes may optionally on occasion contain additional relevant short comments on the cited source but in general, this practice is discouraged.

Bibliographies

Essays MUST provide alphabetically ordered by author’s surname, bibliographies of all works consulted, whether or not they have been quoted directly. An adequate bibliography for this assignment will contain no less than six books or journal articles related to the topic.  General books, dictionaries, atlases, textbooks and/or encyclopedias DO NOT count towards this minimum number of sources, and their inclusion in citations will NOT be considered as constituting research.  Seminar readings are acceptable as citable sources.

An example of a bibliographic entry is as follows:

Smith, John.  History of Canada  (Toronto: Ontario Publishers, 1997).

Submission of Essays

Essays are to be submitted to the instructor on the due date in lecture in hardcopy with pages stapled together.  Folded, pinned, paper-clipped, bound in covers or loose pages, will be refused and will accrue penalties until submitted in the required format.

Electronic Submission of Essays

If you find it necessary to submit an essay by e-mail, the following file naming protocol is to be used:

 
“Last Name_First Name_CourseNumber _Essay Title”

Any attached file not using this exact naming protocol will not be accepted.

Only MS Word files (preferred) in .doc or .docx format or PDF files will be accepted. 

The submission of files by e-mail will be usually acknowledged within two days.

A hard copy of the essay is to be submitted at the next opportunity.  Indicate on the front of the hardcopy the date you had e-mailed the essay to me previously.  The e-mailed essay will secure your submission date.  Obviously the hard copy is to be exactly identical with the e-mailed copy.  Hard copies of previously e-mailed essays not indicating the e-mail date on the cover will be assigned the date of the submission of the hard copy with no appeal. 

Keep submitted essays in your “sent” folder until the final course mark is issued.  Any e-mailed submissions that are inexplicably ‘lost’ or fail to arrive, will only be accepted as “forwards” of the original submitting e-mail with its original attached file.

Hardcopy Submission of Essays  

Do not slip essays under my door or into my mail-box.  Hard copies may be submitted to the Essay Drop-Off Box in the History Department (JOR500). Do not leave essays at the Chang School. 

I will guarantee essay returns with comments by the day of the exam only to those essays submitted to me on the due date, in hard copy, in required format, in lecture.  All other essays will be marked after the exam and arrangements may be made to get your essay mark after the final marks have been submitted.

Late Penalties and Extensions

Extensions may be granted on medical or compassionate grounds but will be automatically penalized three (3) marks regardless. Students requesting an extension should submit an e-mailed request to me before the deadline specifying precisely the date to which they are requesting the extension.  After the due date, students need to provide appropriate documentation relating to the extension request (i.e. doctor’s note, death certificate of relative, police report on their stolen laptop, repair bills for their crashed hard disc, veterinary reports on the contents of Fluffy ’s stomach, etc).  Essays submitted under an extension must have my written response to the extension request attached to the front of the essay.  E-mailed submissions are to be attached as a ‘reply’ to my earlier response to the extension request.  Submissions without my extension approval attached to their front will be penalized as late with no opportunity of appeal afterward. No late work will be accepted after the last day of lecture or extensions granted beyond the last lecture day.  

Two (2) marks per/day are deducted from your essay mark for late submissions, weekends included, until the day the essay is submitted to me.  If I do not acknowledge the receipt of your e-mailed essay within a few days, it is your responsibility to ensure I have received it.  Keep copies of all work, including marked assignments returned to you and e-mails of your submissions until your final course mark is released.  Re-submissions of earlier e-mailed essays “lost” in transmission, should such an unlikely scenario occur, will only be accepted in the form of a forwarded copy of the original e-mail.  There are no exceptions to this.  Outstanding assignments will not be accepted after the last day of lecture.

Earning Marks

The evaluation of your research, content, evidence, originality and argumentation is of primary concern in marking as is the quality of your sources as described above. Equally important is the syntax, style and structure of your work. Marks will be deducted from work containing excessive grammatical/spelling mistakes, typographical errors, from work that is excessively long or inadequately short, or which fails to provide properly formatted footnoting/bibliography. Essays that consist of a frequently quoted passages or sentences, even if footnoted, will be severely penalized.  Be selective in direct quotations.  Ask yourself, “can this be said in my own words and then cited?” Is there a stylistic or argumentative reason for quoting the source directly? Be sure to edit and check your work carefully. Do not simply rely on your computer’s spelling or grammar checker.

Grounds for Assignment Failure

Essays which do not supply proper and adequate references and bibliographies as described above or submitted after the final day of lecture will be failed.  Essays based entirely on websites without the instructor’s permission, will be failed.  Any written work that quotes directly from other material without attribution, or which paraphrases extensive tracts from the works of others, or is written by somebody else in part or in whole without attribution, is plagiarized and will be failed with no opportunity to re-submit and may result in additional severe academic consequences. Please consult the Ryerson academic calendar for further information on plagiarism. If you have any questions or doubts about how to cite material, please feel free to contact me.

Essays that do not provide specific page references in each citation will be automatically failed without an opportunity to resubmit.  Go to the above links for a guide to the required citation format.

Academic Integrity

For additional help, Ryerson now offers the Academic Integrity Website at www.ryerson.ca/academicintegrity. This offers students a variety of resources to assist in their research, writing, and presentation of all kinds of assignments. It also details all dimensions of Academic Misconduct and how to avoid it. It was put together by a team representing the Vice President Academic, faculty, the library, Digital Media Projects, and Student Services.

NOTE: Every effort will be made to manage the course as stated. However, adjustments may be necessary at the discretion of the instructor. If so, students will be advised and alterations discussed in the class prior to implementation.

MISSED TERM WORK OR EXAMINATIONS:

Exemption or deferral of a term test or final examination is not permitted except for a medical or personal emergency. The instructor must be notified by e-mail prior to the test and appropriate documentation submitted. For absence on medical grounds an official student medical certificate must be provided. This may be downloaded from the Ryerson website at www.ryerson.ca/rr or picked up from The Chang School Office.

Absence from mid-term examination or tests:

§  Instructor must be notified by e-mail before the test

§  Documentation must be presented at the next class

§  Depending on course policy, the instructor may arrange a makeup or re-weigh the course requirements

Absence from final exam:

§  Instructor must be notified by e-mail before the examination.

§  Documentation must be presented at The Chang School Office, within three working days.

§  If the majority of the course work has been completed with a passing performance, and the documentation is acceptable, an INC grade will be entered by the instructor. An INC grade will not be granted if term work was missed or failed.

§  The final examination must be written within four months after the submission of the incomplete grade. Failure to do this will result in an F grade.

§  It is the student’s responsibility to contact The Chang School Office at least two weeks prior to the end of the following academic term to arrange to write the final exam.

COURSE REPEATS:

Academic Council GPA policy prevents students from taking a course more than three times.  For complete GPA policy see Policy #46 at http://www.ryerson.ca/acadcouncil/policies.html

Lecture 12

RECOMMENDED READING TO DOWNLOAD:

Kerstin von Lingen, ‘Conspiracy of Silence:  How the “Old Boys” of American Intelligence Shielded SS General Karl Wolff from Prosecution, 
Holocaust and Genocide Studies,

Vol 22, No. 1 (Spring 2008)

pp.  74-109

LINK to CHARTS

John Foster  Dulles – Hermann Schmitz Sullivan & Cromwell LLP – IG Farben Bank of International Settlements

Board of Directors 16 June 1943

LECTURE 13  

Aftermath

  • Grand Alliance

  • Joseph Stalin

  • Franklin Roosevelt

  • Winston Churchill

  • Red Army Capture of the Reichstag

  • War Criminals

  • Nuremberg Trials

  • Berlin 1945 – 1989

  • Cold War 

  • Reinhard Gehlen (Gehlen Org)

  • Klaus Barbie

  • Karl Wolff   

  • Allen Dulles – John Foster Dulles

  • Sullivan and Cromwell LLP

  • Bank of International Settlements (BIS)

  • International Nickel Company (INCO)

  • Sudbury, Ontario

  • International Union of Mine, Mill & Smelter Workers (IUMM&SW)

  • United Steel Workers of America (USWA)

  • Sir Otto Niemeyer

Lecture Week 8

  • Geneva Disarmament Conference

  • League of Nations

  • non-aggression treaty with Poland  (Jan 26, 1934)

  • Joachim von Ribbentrop (1893 – 1946)

  • Dienststelle Buro Ribbentrop

  • Engelbert Dollfuss

  • Vienna Putsch  (July 25, 1934)

  • Kurt von Schuschnigg

  • Saar Reunion Plebiscite   (Jan 13 1935)

  • Stressa Front  (

  • Hitler’s “Sunday Surprises” 

  • Rhineland Remilitarization March 7, 1936            

  • Spanish Civil War  July 1936

  • Condor Legion

  • International Brigades –

    Mackenzie-Papineau Brigade

  • Guernica by Pablo Picasso 

  • International Brigades – Mackenzie-Papineau Brigade

  • Italy and Germany sign a secret pact.  Germany signs with Japan – the Axis is established

  • Prime Minister Mackenzie-King meets Hitler (

  • Italy and Germany sign official non-aggression pact.   

  • Werner von Bloomberg – Minister of Defense – and Werner von Fritsch – commander and chief – both purged (February 4 1938

  •  Anschluss

  • Sudetenland — Sudeten Germans
  • Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain
  • Hitler’s “last territorial demand”
  • Independent Slovakia (March 14, 1939)
  • Czech Reichsprotektorate (March 15, 1939) (Bohemia & Moravia Reichsprotektorate)

  • Hitler Stalin Non-Aggression Pact  (August 23, 1939)

    FURTHER READINGS and SOURCES

Mackenzie-King Diary Entries for Meetings with Goring and Hitler [internet link]  Prime Minister Mackenzie-King Diaries Online – Canada Archives  [internet link]

  Prime Minister Mackenzie-King in Berlin on a private visit –  June 1937

Making friends with Hitler : Lord Londonderry, the Nazis, and the Road to World War II  Kershaw, Ian  

Penguin Press, 2004.

  Nazi Foreign Policy, 1933-1941:The Road to Global War  Leitz, Christian, Routledge, 2004.

Hitler’s Foreign Policy 1933-1939 : The Road to World War II 

Weinberg, Gerhard L. Enigma, 2004. 

What Hitler Knew : The Battle for Information in Nazi Foreign Policy 

Shore, Zachary  Oxford University Press, 2003.

The Diplomacy of the “New Order” : The Foreign Policy of Japan, Germany and Italy: 1931-1945 

Stam, Arthur  Aspekt, 2003. 

Ribbentrop 

Bloch, Michael  Abacus, 2002. 

The Rise and Rise of the Third Reich : Nazi Foreign Policy 1933-1939 

Haigh, R. H. Sheffield  Hallam University, c2001

The Chamberlain-Hitler Collusion 

Leibovitz, Clement Merlin Press ; c1997.

Germany and Europe, 1919-1939 

Hiden, John   

Longman, 1993.

Lecture Week 1

LECTURE 1:

AN INTRODUCTION TO NAZI CRIMINALITY (1933-1945)
& A BRIEF HISTORY OF GERMANY  (98 CE – 1918)

SS Schutzstaffel (“special staff” or “guards detachment”) 

Reichsfuhrer-SS (RFSS) Heinrich Himmler (1900 – 1945)

 

SS-Ahnenerbe (ancestral heritage research & study institute) Natzweiler-Struthof

Germania: The Origins and Situation of the Germans (99 CE) by Cornelius Tacitus (55 – 117 CE)   

Battle of Teutoburg Forest (Teutoburgwald) (9 CE)

Quinctilius Varus Arminius ( = Herman Hermann Herrmann)  Herman the German

Volk Volksgemeinschaft Volkgenossen

Alfred Rosenberg Myth of the 20th Century

Blood and Soil Blut und Boden

The “Five Revolts” of Germany Against Western Civilization (From Teutoburg to the Third Reich)

Charlemagne baptizes the last of the resisting wild Saxon Pagan tribes (772 CE ) [second revolt]

 

  • First Reich: The Holy Roman Empire (962 – 1806)

Friedrich Barbarossa  Teutonic Knights

Lebensraum 

  Martin Luther (1483 – 1546) [third revolt] Thirty Year War ( 1618 – 1648) 

CLICK TO ENLARGE IMAGE (74.6K)

Peace of Westphalia (1648) The Rise of Prussia – 1700s – Fredrick II (The Great) – The Military State

Wars of Independence (1806 – 1813) – Napoleon defeats Prussia and Austria [fourth revolt]

Metternich Period 1815 – 1848 (Austria Dominates)

Johann Gottlieb Fichte Ernst Moritz Arndt Fredrick Ludwick “Father” Jahn Deutsche Volkstum   

Rebirth of Prussia – Prussia vs. Austria

  • Second Reich 1871 – 1918 (Prussia Dominates)

Otto von Bismark (1815 – 1898) Franco-Prussian War 1870 – 1871 Kaiser Wilhelm I reigns 1871 – 1888 Kaiser Wilhelm II reigns 1888 – 1918 Adolf Hitler born in Austria, April 30, 1889

World War One (The Great War) 1914-1918   

Recommended Readings:

Peter Viereck,  The Roots of The Nazi Mind

Fritz Nova, Alfred Rosenberg:  Nazi Theorist of the Holocaust

Michael Burleigh, Death and Deliverance:  ‘Euthanasia’ in Germany 1900-1945

Michael Burleigh, The Third Riech:  A New History

Christopher Hale, Himmler’s Crusade:  The Nazi Expedition to Find the Origins of the Aryan Race

Peter S. Wells, The Battle That Stopped Rome

Simon Schama, Landscape and Memory

Malcolm Pasley (editor), Germany:  A Companion to German Studies (2nd Edition)

Claudia Koonz, The Nazi Conscience

Lecture Week 5

LECTURE  5:

The Nazi Polycracy & The Making of The Police State

KEY TERMS

  • Trial of the Major War Criminals 
    International Military Tribunal, (Nuremberg, 14 November 1945 – 1 October 1946)

    Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1946 (Blue Series)  

  • Trials of the War Criminals 
    Nuremberg Military Tribunal (under Control Council Law No. 10)
    (
    Nuremberg October 1946 – April 1949)
    Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1950   (Green Series)

  • Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression

    Office of the United States Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1946 (Red Series)

     Nuremberg Military Tribunal Charges

    1. Crimes Against Peace
    2. War Crimes
    3. Crimes Against Humanity
    4. Conspiracy to commit the above

  • Fuhrer and Reichs Chancellor

  • Nazi Party functions on three levels:

    1.     Chain of Command & territorial cadres;
    2.     Party Divisions;
    3.     Affiliated Associations.  

  • Fuhrer Chancellery (Kanzlei des Fuhrers – KdF)
  • Philipp Bouhler (1899– 1945)
  • Martin Bormann (1900 – 1945)
  • Party Chancellery
     

  • “polycracy” “polycratic authoritarianism” “chaotic authoritarianism”
  • functionalists and the intentionalists
  • Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich (1904 – 1942)
  • RSHA (Reichssicherheitshauptamt)
  • Reichsfuhrer-SS und Chef der Deutschen Polizei (RFSSuChDtPol)
  • Gestapo  (Topography of Terror Foundation Website Link)

  • Heinrich Mueller (Müller) 1901 – ?  link
  • Oswald Pohl 

  • Dachau KL

  • Theodor Eicke (1892 – 1943)
  • SS-TV (Totenkompfverbande) –  “Death’s Head Units”

  • Waffen-SS

RECOMMENDED READINGS:

Helmut Krausnick, Hans Buchheim, Martin Broszat, Hand Adolf Jacobsen, Anatomy of the SS State (unabridged edition)  
[classic book on the  growth of concentration camps, history of “protective custody”,  SS and Gestapo history]

George H. Stein, The Waffen SS:  Hitler’s Elite Guard at War  1939-1945  
[standard history of the military Waffen SS units]

Gerald Reitlinger, The SS:  Alibi of a Nation 1922 – 1945 

Peter Padfield, Himmler
[biography]

George C. Browder, Foundations of the Nazi Police State  
[history of the Nazi security police system]

Ingo Muller, Hitler’s Justice:  The Courts of the Third Reich 

Reinhard Rurup (ed), Typography of Terror:  Gestapo, SS and Reichssicherheitshauptam on the >>Prinz-Albrecht-Terrain

Lecture Week 4

LECTURE  4:

The Seizure of Power

  • Keppler Circle

  • Dr. Horace Greely Hjalmar Schacht (1877 – 1970)

  • Baron Kurt Freiherr von Schröder
  • Sullivan & Cromwell Limited Liability Partners
  • John Foster Dulles   LINK:  Dulles & IG Farben – BIS Board

  • IG Farben       Link to IG Farben Trial Transcripts
  • Bank of International Settlements (BIS)
  • Reichsbank

  • January 4, 1933 Hitler-Papen Meeting
  • January 15 election in Lippe

  • Alfred Hugenberg / DNVP
         

  • January 30, 1933

  • Wilhelm Frick (1877 –1946)

  • Hermann Wilhelm Göring (or Goering) 1893–1946

Cabinet January 30, 1933

Adolf Hitler (NSDAP) – Chancellor  Franz von Papen – Vice Chancellor  Konstantin Freiherr von Neurath – Minister of Foreign Affairs  Wilhelm Frick (NSDAP) – Minister of the Interior  Lutz Graf Schwerin von Krosigk – Minister of Finance  Alfred Hugenberg (DNVP) – Minister of Economics and Food  Franz Seldte – Minister of Labour  Franz Gürtner (DNVP) – Minister of Justice  Werner von Blomberg – Minister of Defence  Paul Freiherr Eltz von Rübenach – Minister of Posts and Transport 

Hermann Göring (NSDAP) – Minister without Portfolio

 

  • The “National Revolution”  (Jan-March 1933) ( The “Legal Revolution”)


  • Decree for the Protection of the German People (Feb 4, 1933)

  • Schutzhaft – “protective custody”

  • Gestapo —  Geheime Staatspolizei

  • Rudolf Diels (1900 – 1957)

  • The Reichstag Fire
     

  • Decree for the Protection of the People and State 
    (Reichstag Fire Decree, February 28)
     

  • Hilfspolizei    

 

March 5, 1933 Election

  • Nazis:                                          17.2 million votes – 44 percent

  • Communists                                 4.8 million votes

  • Social Democrats (SPD)                7.1 million – second largest party

  • Nationalist (Nazi partners)              3.1 million

Nazi 288 + 52 nationalist seats = 340 seats out of 647 – enough for a majority to govern
but not enough for the two-thirds needed to amend the constitution.

Protective custody arrest statistics for Prussia

DATE                  DISTRICTS REPORTING    ARRESTS 1-15 March           24/34                    7,784 16-31 March         16/34                    2,860 1-15 April              20/34                   3,017 16-30 April 1           9/34                   2,693

Total (Approximately  60%)              16,354

Law for the Removal of the Distress of People and Reich

(The Enabling Act, 23 March 1933)

  • Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli  (Pope Pius XII)

  • Reichskonkordat (concordat)

  • The Gleichschaltung – “Coordination”  (April-December 1933)

  • Law on Industry Representation and Economic Associations (4 April 1933)
  • National Labour Front

  • Law for the Re-establishment of the Professional Civil Service (7 April 1933)    
  • Law against the Establishment of Parties (14 July 1933)
  • Law for Securing the Unity of the Party and State (1 December 1933)

  • Operation Hummingbird (Night of the Long Knives, 30 June 1934)
  • Law Regarding Measures of State Self-Defense (July 3, 1934)  

  • Death of von Hindenburg (August 1934)

  • First they came for the communists, and I did not speak up,

    for I was not a communist.

    Then they came for the social democrats,
    and I did not speak up,
    for I was not a social democrat.

    Then they came for the trade unionists,
    and I did not speak up,
    for I was not a trade unionist.

    Then they came for the Jews, I did not speak up,

    for I was not a Jew.

    And then when they came for me,
    there was no one left to speak out for me.

FURTHER READINGS:

Henry Ashby Turner, Jr.  German Big Business & The Rise of Hitler

Max Wallace, The American Axis:  Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh and the Rise of the Third Reich

James Pool, Who Financed Hitler 1919-1933  James Pool,  Hitler and His Secret Partners 1933-1945

Ian Kershaw, Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris

George C. Browder, Foundations of the Nazi Police State:  The Formation of the Sipo and SD

Peter Hayes, Industry and Ideology:  IG Farben in the Nazi Era

Joseph Borkin, The Crime and Punishment of I.G. Farben

Harold James, The Nazi Dictatorship and the Deutsche Bank

Richard Overy, Goering

Ingo Muller, Hitler’s Justice:  The Courts of the Third Reich