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HIST 217-01, Total War, Cold War, and beyond: Europe since 1914, Spring 2001
Jackson, Jeffrey H.
Jackson, Jeffrey H.
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History, Department of, Syllabus, Curriculum, Academic departments, Text, 2001 Spring
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Abstract
This course explores the immediate history of our own time by examining the events and
themes of the twentieth century in the West. Through lectures, readings, and discussions,
we will examine how the Western world has evolved during the last hundred years
through what one historian has called an “age of extremes.” Certain central issues will
emerge during this course including: the legacies of destruction cause by two “World
Wars,” the impact of the crisis of capitalism during the “Great Depression,” the
emergence of a “Cold War” between powers who often used Europe as a chessboard for
the games of international brinksmanship, and the encroachment of American culture
onto a Europe struggling to redefine itself as it has gradually faded from a position of
world dominance.
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This syllabus ws submitted to the Office of Academic Affairs by the course instructor