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Twenty-five. Turmoil Between Wars. Introduction. The legacy of the Great War Near collapse of democracy The rise of authoritarian dictatorships. The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin. The Russian Civil War Treaty of Brest-Litovsk polarized Russian society The Whites
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Twenty-five Turmoil Between Wars
Introduction • The legacy of the Great War • Near collapse of democracy • The rise of authoritarian dictatorships
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin The Russian Civil War Treaty of Brest-Litovsk polarized Russian society The Whites Loose group united by the desire to remove the Reds from power Supporters of the old regime Reds (Bolsheviks) faced strong nationalist movements Ukraine, Georgia, and north Caucasus
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin • The Russian Civil War • United States, Britain, and Japan intervene on the periphery of the old empire • Solidified Bolshevik mistrust of capitalist world powers • Bolshevik victory • Gained greater support from the majority of the population • Better organization • Leon Trotsky as new commissar of war • Consequences • One million combat casualties • Several million dead from hunger and disease • Total of 100,000 to 300,000 executed (on both sides) • Created permanent hatreds
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin • War communism • Government control of industry • Government requisitioned grain from the peasantry • Outlawed private trade in consumer goods • Militarized production facilities and abolished money • Consequences • Devastated Russian industry and emptied major cities • Industrial output in 1920 fell to only 20 percent of prewar levels • Large-scale famine (1921)
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin • The NEP period (New Economic Policy) • Reversion to state capitalism • State owned all major industry • Individuals could own private property • Free trade within limits • Peasants farmed the land for their own benefit • Peasants should “enrich” themselves • Taxes would support urban industrialization and working classes • Divided up noble lands to level wealth disparities • Reintroduced traditional social structure (peasant communes) • Produced enough grain to feed the country • Failure • Cities experienced grain shortages
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin • Stalin and the “revolution from above” • Stalin the man • Born in Georgia as Iosip Jughashvili (1879–1953) • Lenin’s death (1924—Stalin or Trotsky) • Stalin the strategist • Isolated all opposition • Used the left to isolate the right, used the right to isolate the left • Abandoned NEP • Increased tempo of industrialization • Forced industrialization and the total collectivization of agriculture
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin • Collectivization • Local party and police officials forced peasants to join collective farms • Peasant resistance—1,600 large-scale rebellions between 1929 and 1933 • The liquidation of the kulaks as a class • The famine (1932–1933) • The human cost was 3 to 5 million lives • The Bolsheviks retained grain reserves in other parts of the country • Grain reserves sold overseas for currency and stockpiled in the event of war
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin The Five-Year Plans Campaign of forced industrialization First Five-Year Plan (1928–1932) Most stunning period of economic growth Industrial output increased 50 percent in five years Built new industries in new cities The human cost Large-scale projects carried out with prison labor The gulag system By 1940, 3.6 million people were incarcerated by the regime
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin • The Five-Year Plans • Structural problems • The command economy—production levels planned from Moscow in advance • Heavy industry favored over light industry • Emphasis on quantity over quality • Cultural and economic changes • The conservative shift • Divorce was difficult to obtain • Abortion made illegal except in emergency situations • Homosexuality declared a criminal offense
The Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin • The Great Terror (1937–1938) • One million dead—1.5 million to the Gulag • The elimination of Stalin’s enemies, real or imagined • Mass repression of internal enemies from the top to the very bottom • Purged the old Bolsheviks • Targeted ethnic groups (Poles, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Latvians, and Koreans) • Stalin and total control • Social advances • Illiteracy reduced • Higher education made available to more people • Government assistance for working mothers • Free hospitalization
The Emergence of Fascism in Italy • In the aftermath of war • Problems • Split between the industrial north and agrarian south • Conflict over land, wages, and local power • Government corruption and indecision • Inflation, unemployment, and strikes • Demands for radical reform
The Emergence of Fascism in Italy • The rise of Mussolini (1883–1945) • Editor of Avantia (leading socialist daily) • The fasci • Organized to drum up support for the war • Attracted young, idealist, fanatical nationalists • Fascist support • Gained respect of middle classes and landowners • Repressed radical movements of workers and peasants • Attacked socialists • Fifty thousand fascist militia marched on Rome on October 28, 1922 • The black shirts • Victor Emmanuel III invited Mussolini to form a cabinet
The Emergence of Fascism in Italy • Italy under Mussolini • One-party dictatorship • Statism—“nothing above, outside, or against the state” • Nationalism—the “highest form of society” • Militarism—the “ennoblement” of man in war • Changed the electoral laws • Abolished cabinet system • Mussolini assumed role of prime minister and party leader (Il Duce) • Repression and censorship • Ended class conflict • A managed economy • A corporate state • Maintained the status quo and “made the trains run on time”
Weimar Germany • November 9, 1918: Revolution • Bloodless overthrow of the imperial government • Social Democratic Party (SPD) announced a new German republic • The kaiser abdicated • Socialists wanted democratic reforms within existing imperial bureaucracy
Weimar Germany • Problems • Elections not held until January 1919 • Communists and independent socialists staged armed uprisings in Berlin • Social Democrats tried to crush the uprisings
Weimar Germany • The Freikorps • Former army officers fighting Bolsheviks, Poles, and communists • Fiercely right-wing anti-Marxist, anti-Semitic, and antiliberal
Weimar Germany • The Weimar coalition • Socialists, Catholic centrists, and liberal democrats • Parliamentary liberalism • Pluralistic framework • Universal suffrage for men and women • Bill of rights
Weimar Germany • The failure of Weimar • Social, political, and economic crisis • The humiliation of World War I • Germany “stabbed in the back” by socialists and Jews • What was needed was authoritarian leadership • Versailles and reparations • $33 billion debt
Weimar Germany The failure of Weimar The government continued to print money Middle-class employees, farmers, and workers hit hardest by inflation Further problems Unemployment Production dropped by 44 percent Peasants staged mass demonstrations Left the door open for the opponents of Weimar
Hitler and the National Socialists • Adolf Hitler (1889–1945) • Born in Austria, aspired to be an artist • Spent his youth as a tramp in Vienna • Embraced anti-Semitism, anti-Marxism, and pan-Germanism • The outbreak of World War I was his liberation • After the war, he joined the German Workers’ Party • Became the National Socialist Workers’ Party (Nazi) in 1920
Hitler and the National Socialists • Hitler and the Nazis • November 1923—Munich putsch • Hitler imprisoned • Dictated Mein Kampf • Portrayed himself as the savior of the German people • Nazi elections • 1928—politics polarized between left and right • The impossibility of a coalition • People abandoned traditional political parties
Hitler and the National Socialists Hitler and the Nazis Nazi supporters Small-property holders and rural middle classes Elitist civil servants 1930 election Nazis won 107 of 577 seats in the Reichstag No party gained a majority Nazis claimed no coalition government not headed by Hitler
Hitler and the National Socialists • Hitler as chancellor • January 1933—Hindenberg appointed Hitler chancellor • February 27, 1933—Reichstag set on fire by Dutch anarchist • Hitler suspended civil rights • March 5, 1933—New elections • Hitler granted unlimited power for four years • Hitler proclaimed the Third Reich
Hitler and the National Socialists • Nazi Germany • A one-party state • Opposition • Storm troopers (SA) used to maintain party discipline • June 30, 1934—Night of the Long Knives • Schutzstaffel (SS) • Most-dreaded arm of Nazi terror • Organized by Heinrich Himmler • Fighting political and racial enemies
Hitler and the National Socialists Nazi Germany Support Played off fears of communism Spoke a language of national pride Hitler as the symbol of a strong, revitalized Germany The recovery of German national glory
Hitler and the National Socialists Nazi Germany National recovery Sealed Germany off from the rest of the world Unemployment dropped from 6 million to 200,000 Organized workers into the National Labor Front Popular organizations cut across class lines The Hitler Youth The National Labor Service
Hitler and the National Socialists • Nazi racism • Nazi racism grew out of nineteenth-century opinions • Anti-Semitism • Joined by nationalist anti-Jewish theory • April 1933—new racial laws excluded Jews from public office • 1935 Nuremberg Decrees • Deprived Jews of citizenship (determined by bloodline) • November 1938—Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass)
Hitler and the National Socialists • National socialism and fascism • Both arose in the interwar period as responses to war and revolution • Intensely nationalistic • Opposed parliamentary government and democracy • Favored mass-based authoritarian regimes
The Great Depression in the Democracies • Western democracies—France, Britain, and the United States
The Great Depression in the Democracies • The origins of the Great Depression • Causes • Instability of national currencies • Interdependence of national economies • Widespread drop in industrial productivity • Restrictions of free trade
The Great Depression in the Democracies The origins of the Great Depression October 1929—collapse of the New York Stock Exchange United States as world’s creditor Immediate and disastrous consequences for European economy Banking houses closed, manufacturers laid off entire workforces
The Great Depression in the Democracies The origins of the Great Depression Government response Britain Abandoned gold standard and free trade Cautious relief efforts France The Popular Front Nationalized munitions industry Forty-hour week Fixed the price and regulated the distribution of grain United States The New Deal and FDR Recovery without destroying capitalism Managing the economy and public-works projects John Maynard Keynes
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals • The rejection of tradition and the experiment with new forms of expression
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals • Interwar intellectuals • Disillusionment with war and the failure of victory • Frustration, cynicism, and disenchantment • Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961) • T. S. Eliot (1888–1965) • Bertolt Brecht (1898–1956) • James Joyce (1882–1941): Ulysses (1922), “stream of consciousness” • The politicization of literature
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals • Interwar artists • Developments paralleled those in literature • The dadaists • Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968), Max Ernst (1891–1976), and Hans Arp (1886–1966) • Rejected all forms of artistic conventions • Haphazard “fabrications”
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals Interwar artists Art for a mass audience Diego Rivera (1886–l957) and José Clemente Orozco (1883–1949) Thomas Hart Benton (1889–1975) and Reginald Marsh (1898–1954) Depicting social conditions of the modern world The hopes and struggles of ordinary people
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals Interwar artists Architecture Functionalism “Form ever follows function” Ornamentation to reflect an age of science and machines Walter Gropius (1883–1969) and Bauhaus An international style
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals • Interwar scientific developments • Albert Einstein (1879–1955) • Revolutionized modern physics • Challenged our beliefs about the universe • New ways of thinking about space, matter, time, and gravity • The theory of relativity • Time, the fourth dimension • James Chadwick (1891–1974) • Discovery of the neutron (1932)
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals Interwar scientific developments Otto Hahn (1879–1968) and Fritz Strassman (1902–1980) Split atoms of uranium (1939) Chain reaction Werner Heisenberg (1901–1976) and the uncertainty principle (1927) Relativity and uncertainty as metaphors for the ambiguity of modern life
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals • Mass culture and its possibilities • Explosive rise of mass media—media for the masses • Mass politics as a fact of life • Cut across class lines, ethnicity, and nationality
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals Mass culture and its possibilities The radio Europe—broadcasting rights owned by the government United States—broadcasting managed by corporations National soapbox for politicians FDR’s fireside chats Nazi propaganda The new ritual of political life—communication and persuasion
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals Mass culture and its possibilities Film France and Italy had strong film industries 1927—Sound added to films United States gained a competitive edge over Europe The Hollywood “star system” Stalin and socialist realism Mussolini and classical kitsch Hitler despised modern art as decadent
Interwar Culture: Artists and Intellectuals Mass culture and its possibilities The Nazis and propaganda Used film as a means of indoctrination and control “Spectacular politics” Glorifying the Reich Leni Riefenstahl (1902–2003): Triumph of the Will (1934)
Conclusion • The strains of World War I • The Great Depression • International tensions
This concludes the Lecture PowerPoint for Chapter 25. http://www.wwnorton.com/college/history/wciv_16e/brief