Chapter 34 An Age of Anxiety Still from The Cabinet of Dr.

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Transcript Chapter 34 An Age of Anxiety Still from The Cabinet of Dr.

Chapter 34
An Age of Anxiety
Still from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)
1
Postwar Pessimism
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The “lost generation”
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Term coined by Gertrude Stein, the writer/playwright/art
patron and godmother of Americans in-exile in Paris after
the war.
Surreal scene of many men on the street lacking limbs in
Paris, London, and Berlin
Disillusionment after WWI and pessimism over
idea of human progress
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Oswald Spengler, Decline of the West: multi-volume work
by a retired school teacher theorizing that civilizations are
like organisms, and that Western culture was in its dying
phase.
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Postwar Pessimism
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Many attacks on progress: Scientists and technological
innovations were deemed responsible for the making of
poisonous gas and explosives that killed millions and
destroyed agriculture and cities.
Science was blamed for the industrialized horrors of
World War I.
Most western societies granted suffrage to all men and
women.
Many intellectuals became disillusioned with democracy
because they saw it as lacking positive values. Some
worried about the “rule of inferiors.”
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Revolution in Physics
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Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
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Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976)
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Theory of special relativity
Neither time nor space are absolute values as they vary
with observer; destabilizes orderly system of
Newtonian physics
The uncertainty principle: the act of observation
interferes with whatever is being observed
Concepts extended to humanities and social sciences
4
Revolution in Psychology
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Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
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The life of the subconscious mind
Repression of sexual desires, fears
Interpretation of dreams
Free association
In the 1920s and 1930s: Widespread application
of his theories to mythology, religion, literature,
art, etc.
5
Experimentation in Art
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Photography makes realism irrelevant
Art as creation, not reproduction
Retreat to abstraction
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Les Fauves (“wild beasts”) Group of artists led by Henri Matisse
and André Derain in the first decade of the 1900s. Favored wild
colors and stepped away from realistic representation.
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Influence of non-western and ancient “primitive”
styles
6
Experimentation in Art
Henri Matisse, Blue Nude (Souvenir de Biskra), 1907
André Derain, Charing Cross Bridge, London, 1906,
Fauvism
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Experimentation in Art
Portrait of Gertrude Stein, 1905-06
Bust of a Man, 1908
Guitar, 1912
é
Pablo Picasso (1881–1973)
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Experimentation in Architecture
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Staatliches Bauhaus: First school for modern design
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Director: Walter Gropius (1883-1969)
Operated from 1919 to 1925 in Weimar and from 1925 to 1933 in
Dessau; shut down by the Nazis
Teachers are practitioners and artists rather than academics
No extraneous ornamentation; designers should work for
industry and mass production
Bauhaus Aesthetic Leads to New Style of Skyscrapers
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“Glass boxes” of the “International style”
 Loved by businesses and governments
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Experimentation in Architecture
Bauhaus Dessau building
designed by Gropius,
opened in 1926
Poster for a 1923
Bauhaus exhibition
Oskar Schlemmer,
Bauhaus Stairway,
1932
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Experimentation in Architecture
“Glass Boxes” of the “International Style”
United Nations Headquarters in Manhattan
designed by Le Corbusier, completed in 1952
Lever House in Manhattan
completed in 1952
11
European Origins of the Great
Depression
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Austria/Germany borrow money from U.S. to pay
war debts to France and England
France and England pay debts owed to U.S. for
WWI
System dependent on flow of cash from U.S.
Investors begin to pull out of Germany and
Austria in 1928 in part to put the money in the
booming New York stock exchange
12
New Technologies and the Great
Depression
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Single-export countries devastated by declines
due to new technologies that make them less in
demands
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Reclaimed rubber destroys rubber-based economies of
Dutch East Indies, Malaysia, Ceylon
More widespread use of oil hurts the coal industry,
which is vast and employs many people in the U.S.
13
Agricultural Surpluses and the Great
Depression
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Overproduction in 1920s in Europe, United States, Canada,
Argentina, and Australia.
Strongest harvests in 1925, 1929
Wheat at lowest price in 400 years
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Farm income drops
Less demand for manufactured goods in the agricultural sector
Inventory surpluses
The Dust Bowl: Mid-1930s drought and overused soil
create conditions for massive wind erosion in the Great
Plains, causing massive dust storms and exacerbating
depression conditions
14
Black Thursday - October 24, 1929
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Small Investors: The booming stock market of the 1920s led
many brokers to sell to regular, middle-class people. Roughly
16% of American households owned stocks.
Speculation: Stock could be purchased on as little as a third of
the face value on the assumption they would continue to go up;
brokers would lend the rest.
Hints of slowdown in Europe in 1928-1929
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Investors begin to sell off stocks and American market becomes volatile
September: cycles of falling and then recovering
Black Thursday
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Market turns down, triggering a swell of panic selling
The collapse turns global, effecting every market except for Japan
15
U.S. Economic Collapse
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Inventory surplus leads to massive layoffs
Layoffs lead to decreased demand, businesses fail
1932 industrial production of the U.S. is half of 1929
levels
44% of U.S. banks out of business by the early 1930s:
Deposits lost (not insured)
Because the world depended on the export of U.S. capital
and the U.S. import markets, this created a global effect.
16
World Economic Collapse
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When U.S. investors called in loans, banks in Austria
and Germany became vulnerable because they had
been major recipients of U.S. loans.
The Germany economy experienced a huge economic
slide that by 1932 resulted in 35 percent
unemployment and a 50 percent decrease in industrial
production.
Foreign trade fell sharply between 1929 and 1932
causing further losses in manufacturing and
employment.
.
17
World Economic Collapse
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Hardest hit: countries dependent on export of
agricultural and manufactured goods
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Chile: Devastated since its economy was so reliant on the export of mined
copper and nitrates.
Caribbean: Sugar exports decline
Argentina: Beef exports decline
Brazil: Global devaluation of coffee hurts the Brazilian economy greatly
and pushes industrialization efforts for economic diversity.
Germany: Reliant on exporting manufactured goods, Germany suffered
greatly: 5 million unemployed by 1932, severe hyperinflation, all
exacerbated by reparation payments.
Japan: Not too hard hit due to aggressive deficit spending by the
government to develop heavy industries (especially munitions).
.
18
Initial Government Attempts to
Increase Demand
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U.S.: “planned scarcity” in 1934
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Vegetables, fruits, crops, and animals destroyed: 10 million acres
of cotton and 12,000 acres of tobacco plowed under, 6 million
pigs slaughtered, and a whole California fruit crop allowed to rot
on the vine.
Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath: Bitterly angry passage points
to the irony of the government destroying crops at a time when
people are starving.
19
Initial Government Attempts to
Increase Demand
From The Grapes of Wrath (published 1939):
“The people come with nets to fish for potatoes in
the river and the guards hold them back; they
come in rattling cars to get the dumped oranges,
but the kerosene is sprayed. And they stand still
and watch potatoes float by, listen to the screaming pigs being
killed in a ditch and covered with quicklime, watch the
mountains of oranges slop down to a putrefying ooze; and in
the eyes of the people there is the failure; an in the eyes of the
hungry there is a growing wrath.”
20
Social Effects of the Great
Depression
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Thinkers like French physician Charles Richet believed
that removing women from the workforce would solve
the problem of male unemployment and increase the
nation’s low birthrate.
Great Depression caused enormous personal suffering
Millions struggled for food, clothing, and shelter
Marriage and birthrates declined, suicide increased
Intensified social divisions and class hatreds
21
Social Effects of the Great
Depression
Great Depression Bread Line near the Brooklyn Bridge
22
New U.S. Strategies
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Laissez-faire, “planned scarcity” approaches fail
Economist John M. Keynes (1883-1946) challenged classical
economic theory: the belief that capitalism was self-correcting and
operated best if left alone.
Keynes argued the depression was a problem of inadequate demand,
not supply; therefore, governments should play an active role in
stimulating economy and consumer demand.
Keynes: Health of the economy is not measured by production, but
by employment.
The New Deal of Franklin Delano Roosevelt:
WWII Spending: Federal money injected into the economy in
preparation for World War II ultimately lifts the depression
conditions.
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
23
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
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The New Deal of President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt anticipated Keynes's
ideas.
After 1932, Roosevelt put in place a protected
banking system, massive public works projects, and
farm subsidies
Also, legislation established minimum wage, social
security, workers' unions
Creates the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
24
The Bolshevik Revolution
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In October 1917, Lenin led an armed
uprising against the Provisional Government.
Lenin renamed the Bolshevik Party as the
Communist Party in order to win wider
support.
In December 1917 Lenin set up a secret
police force known as the Cheka; agents spied on industrial
workers and peasants.
Lenin launched the “Red Terror” campaign in September 1918
against anti-Soviet peasants, striking workers, and anyone
associated with the White Guard. Some estimates say 50,000
people were arrested and executed in this period.
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War Communism, 1918-1922
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Lenin pushes for rapid collectivization of farms
and confiscations of private property
Massively unpopular, Lenin backtracks in 1921
He initiates the New Economic Policy (NEP),
which allows for partial privatization of the
economy
Lenin crushes workers’ strikes, peasant rebellions,
and a sailor’s revolt.
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New Economic Policy (NEP)
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The New Economic Policy (NEP) temporarily
restored private enterprise in Russia.
Large industries, banks, and transportation and
communications facilities remained under state
control.
Government returned small-scale industries to private
ownership.
The government allowed peasants to sell their
surpluses at free market prices.
Technical schools were established.
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Lenin’s Death
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Lenin suffers three debilitating strokes and dies
1924.
Bitter power struggle among Bolshevik leaders
ensues.
Lenin had written that Stalin was too rude and
lacking finesse to become the Secretary-General.
28
Joseph Stalin (1879-1953)
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Native of the nation of Georgia in
the Caucasus
Mother’s influence leads to
Orthodox seminary education
Stalin triumphs over party rivals
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Stalin: Name means “Man of steel”
Advocates socialism in one country
Consolidates rule over the Soviet Union by 1928
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Stalin and Economic Planning
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Stalin initiates the First Five-Year Plan (1928-1933)
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Massive collectivization of agriculture
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Gosplan: the Soviet central planning agency controls all aspects
of the economy
Focuses on developing heavy industry, collectived farms with use
of state-owned tractors, and electrification
Kulaks: peasant land-holders who resisted collectivization;
targets of government persecution
Stalin halts collectivization in 1931
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Proclaims its success, although reduction in productivity and
famine resulted in 1932-33: millions die of starvation
Destabilized Stalin’s power, heightening his paranoia
30
The Great Purge (1937-38)
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“Congress of Victors” in 1934 was the 17th annual meeting of
the Communist Party in the Soviet Union, but was the last
clandestine attempt to unseat Stalin, but the disloyalty was
reported to Stalin.
Later nicknamed the “Congress of Victims,” because of the
1,996 delegates, over 1,100 would be arrested over the next
three years.
The “Cleansing”
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Stalin removes all persons that he suspects of opposition from
1935-1938
Two-thirds of Central Committee
Half of army’s high ranking officers
Sent to labor camps or executed
31
The Growth of European Fascism
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From fasces, Roman symbol of authority
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Axe surrounded by wooden rods
Originates with Benito Mussolini in 1919
Mussolini’s doctrine included elements of
nationalism, corporatism, national syndicalism,
expansionism, and anti-socialism
Outside of Italy and Germany: Argentina,
Japan, Peru, Paraguay, Romania, Spain, etc.
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
32
Fascism: Common Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Primacy of state over individual
Devotion to a strong leader
Ethnocentric
Militaristic
Anti-communist
Chauvinistic
Xenophobic
©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
33
Fascism in Italy
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Poor showing of post-WWI Italian
government
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Mussolini, former newspaper editor,
electoral successes in 1921
March on Rome, October, King Emmanuel III
offers him office of prime minister
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Public disappointed with weak
territorial gains
Economic and social turmoil
Blackshirts: paramilitary outfit
In 1926, he seizes power as Il Duce, “the leader”
34
Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) and the
Nazi Party
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Hitler becomes chairman of the National Socialist
German Workers’ Party (Nazis) in 1921
Attempts to overthrow Munich government in
1923 “Beer Hall Putsch”
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Writes autobiography Mein Kampf in jail, massively popular;
outlines his plans quite clearly
Capitalizes on public discontent with postwar era
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War guilt clause
Reparation payments
Inability of major parties to come to consensus
Anti-Semitism
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Consolidation of Power
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Nazis become single largest party in parliament,
1930-1932
Weak president Paul von Hindenburg (18471934) appoints Hitler as chancellor
Suppresses opposition, abrogates constitutional
and civil rights
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Makes the Nazis the sole legal party
Destroys trade unions
Purges judiciary, civil service of perceived enemies
36
The Racial State
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Theories of racial superiority, racial purity
Policies of eugenics
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Compulsory sterilization of 30,000 Germans
Abortions illegal for healthy Germans, mandatory for
“hereditary ill” and “racial aliens”
Euthanasia program kills 200,000 people with physical
or mental handicaps between 1939 and 1945
Precursor to massacres of Jews, gypsies
37
Anti-Semitism
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Influence of nineteenth-century racism
Nuremburg laws of 1935 define Jews on a racial
basis
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Prohibits marriages between Jews and non-Jews
Removal of Jews from civil service, schools
Liquidation of Jewish-owned businesses or purchase by non-Jews
Kristallnacht: major country-wide pogrom on
Jews, November 9-10, 1938, encouraged by Nazi
officials
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“Night of broken glass”
38