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World War II

World War II. The ‘Good War’ at Home and Abroad. Background, Causes. Leftover strains, economic problems from WWI Failure of democracy in Germany, Italy, USSR Authoritarian govts in Italy, Japan, Germany, Spain Rise of Hitler and Nazis, legally gained power, support of German people

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World War II

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  1. World War II The ‘Good War’ at Home and Abroad

  2. Background, Causes • Leftover strains, economic problems from WWI • Failure of democracy in Germany, Italy, USSR • Authoritarian govts in Italy, Japan, Germany, Spain • Rise of Hitler and Nazis, legally gained power, support of German people • Fascism = belief in superior race, party rule, extreme nationalism, dictatorship, world domination, expansionism (Lebensraum)

  3. Lead-up to U.S. Involvement • 1930s, Japanese colonialism in Pacific • 1930s, Rise of fascism in Europe • 1936, Axis formed (Germany, Italy, Japan) • 1938, Germany annexed Austria, Czech. • 1939, Hitler-Stalin Pact • 1939, Hitler invaded Poland • June, 1940, France fell • Summer-fall, 1940, Battle of Britain (bombing) • June, 1941, Hitler invaded USSR (mistake) • Dec. 7, 1941, Pearl Harbor, U.S. entered war

  4. From Isolationism to War • American criticism of WWI, “merchants of death” – 1935 Neutrality Act; ‘cash-and-carry’ law • America First movement

  5. From Isolationism to War • Charles Lindbergh and others sympathetic to Nazis • But FDR and many Americans sympathized with Britain and Allies – pressure to join war • Changed laws to allow trade with allies • Lend-lease, Jan. 1941, allowed arming of Allies, moving U.S. closer to participation • Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941 – united Americans in entering and winning war

  6. Fighting the War: Basics • Allies, Big Three (U.S., GB, USSR) + France and China • FDR, Churchill, Stalin – Big Three Leaders • Strained relations over war aims and strategy • Axis (Germany, Italy, Japan) • Hitler, Mussolini, Emperor Hirohito/Military leaders • Two Wars: Europe and Pacific • War in Europe • USSR vs. Germany, 1941, the Eastern Front • Allies entered Europe through Africa/Italy first (1942/43) • Then D-Day invasion at Normandy on French coast (1944), push towards Berlin • V-E Day, May 8, 1945

  7. Fighting the War: Basics • War in the Pacific: naval, air, jungle combat • Japanese empire throughout Pacific • Midway naval battles: U.S. victories in 1942 halted Japanese advance on Australia and hurt Japanese navy • Island-hopping towards Japanese islands • Guadalcanal, 1942-1943 • Iwo Jima and Okinawa, 1943 • Fire-bombing of Tokyo, Spring 1945 • Predictions of mass slaughter if U.S. invaded Japanese homeland • August 6 and 9, atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; Japan surrendered shortly after

  8. The Big Three

  9. Expanded Govt. Power • Similar to WWI experience • Dollar-a-year men, corp. leaders, guaranteed profits • Bigness a benefit – large bureaucracies and businesses favored for high productivity – top 100 comp. from 30% (1940) to 70% (1945) • WPB – powerful, contracts, conversion, control • OPA – controlled consumer prices • Paying for war: taxes, debt, bonds • Military drafted 31 million men; half failed

  10. Idealism of Allies • FDR’s Four Freedoms: • Atlantic Charter – U.S. and GB – war a fight for freedom, free trade, collective security, national self-determination • Music of Popular Front: • Aaron Copland • George Gershwin • Woody Guthrie • Big Band

  11. Four Freedoms

  12. Four Freedoms

  13. Mobilization at Home: Unity and Sacrifice

  14. Labor shortage: women, blacks entered workforce, industrial jobs, moved north Workers continued to join unions during war Gained higher wages and income NWLB handled disputes Labor’s no-strike pledge for war Tension and strikes: disputes over wages vs. corp. profits led UMW to strike in 1943 Mobilizing Workers: Creating an ‘Arsenal of Democracy’

  15. Problems of WWII: War as Crucible • War challenged nation and people to define themselves: ideals, who belonged, goals • Problems of race and racism • Inclusion or exclusion of immigrants • Economic and social equality: equal sacrifice for war effort? • War goals and methods: do they fit with national ideals? • Long-term effects of war on society

  16. Good War, Race War? • Rationale for WWII as ‘Good War’: • As framed by FDR, WWII was a fight for freedom, against tyranny • A war against fascism, racial superiority • Continuation and completion of New Deal • Fight for economic and racial liberalism at home and abroad • Holocaust made war even more just – fascism was evil, based on racial superiority and cleansing

  17. A War of Possibilities: Racial and Economic Liberalism • Economic Liberalism: Social and economic equality (The Four Freedoms) • Equality of sacrifice in wartime (fair wages and profits) • Racial Equality: Incorporation of blacks and immigrants into nation – the right to fight, to be patriotic, to join the nation • Racial Equality: Ability of all Americans to serve country and gain benefits of service

  18. Racial Liberalism During War

  19. WWII Civil Rights: Realities • Fight for equality at home and in war effort: • Black newspapers and organizations: Double V campaign: war against fascism abroad AND racism at home • FEPC created in 1941 after A. Philip Randolph’s threat of March on Washington – equal opportunity • U.S. armed forces segregated throughout war, even in other countries • War as hothouse for civil rights: • Disappointments of wartime experience led to black mobilization of 1950s and 1960s • Women reluctant to return home after war-work, fought 1950s domestic culture • Gays became less isolated, found others, organized

  20. WWII Civil Rights: Realities • Tendency towards suspicion and conformity on the home front • Private Snafu films • Problems of racism at home and abroad: • Conflict between war aims and realities of racism in U.S. society and military • Discrimination against black Americans: segregated armed forces, workplaces, lower pay • Japanese internment • Anti-Hispanic attacks in Los Angeles led to “zoot suit riots” • Racial war against Japanese

  21. Double Victory over Racism Band, The Ink Spots, supported Double V campaign

  22. Legacy of Wartime Racism • Why no black soldiers in Saving Private Ryan? • Structural and legal racism had long-term effects • Segregated armed forces, bases • Unable to prove heroism/loyalty • Discouraged from using G.I. Bill • G.I. housing loan discrimination; redlined black neighborhoods • Desegregated armed forces, in 1948: wars with black soldiers on front lines = losses, dishonorable wars

  23. Race War in the Pacific • War against Japanese diff. than war against Germans: racism on both sides • History of white anti-Asian racism in U.S. and abroad (Chinese/Japanese exclusion, Filipino war) • Japanese internment within U.S. • “Japs” portrayed as particularly sneaky (rats) and bloodthirsty • Racial aspect, along w/ nature of jungle combat, led to atrocities on both sides • Take no prisoners • Taking of souvenirs (body parts, skulls) • Would U.S. have used atomic bomb against the Germans?

  24. Anti-Japanese Propaganda

  25. Anti-Japanese Propaganda

  26. Anti-Japanese Propaganda

  27. Ethics and Morality of War • ‘The Good War’? • Effects of WWII military tactics and culture on later U.S. and world history? • German and Japanese war machines, atrocities on civilians: • Nazis, Guernica, bombing of London, Holocaust • Japanese, Rape of Nanking, kamikaze, enslavement • Methods of war: • mass mechanized war • targeting of civilians • inciting terror and demoralization • U.S. bombing of non-military civilian German targets: Dresden (Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five) • U.S. intentional firebombing of Tokyo; ¼ of city burned • U.S. use of atomic bombs

  28. Summary Questions: • Why did U.S. join WWII? • How did it win the war? • What was life like on the home front? • What ideals did U.S. support and oppose during the war? • Did WWII remake U.S. society? • Did the U.S. live up to its ideals during WWII?

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