STALIN S RUSSIA AT WAR

Similar documents
History #481 Stalinism Wednesdays 2:30-4:20 Rice 17

Teaching assistant: Michelle Penn Colorado.EDU

Office Hours: Mon. 11:00-12:00 Rice 313 Wed., 4:00-5:00, and by appt. Office phone: History #379 Stalinism

History 367: Soviet Russia

LESSON OBJECTIVE. 1.) DEFINE & USE the word Totalitarianism

Office: 2139 Humanities Hall Phone: Office Hours: M 2-3:00; W 9-10:00; Th 9:45-10:45 and by appointment

Historical interpretations of Stalinism. A short introduction.

Animal Farm: Historical Allegory = Multiple Levels of Meaning

The Soviet Union vs. Human Nature

Who is Stalin? Young Stalin

HSTR th Century Europe

Transition materials for A Level History. Russia

HISTORY 38: RUSSIA IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY SPRING Bob Weinberg Trotter 218 Office Hours: T/TH W: 1-3 rweinbe1

Typical question stems are To what extent?, How far?, How significant was?, How accurate is it to say that? and Why?

Russian History II (HST 108): 1861 to 2014

HIST 471C5: STALIN AND STALINISM

Russian History Since 1900 (

Gods, Saints, and Sinners: The Culture of Religion in Colonial Latin America

A Student Response Journal for. Anthem. by Ayn Rand. written by Pete Boysen

Backgrounds of Modern Literature English 344L Class Unique Number: Spring 2010 PAR 206 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:00-6:30pm

Further your understanding of how Christian writers and leaders have interpreted human experience and human destiny.

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

Modern America Cooke. Reconstruction Essay

Introduction to South Asia

Pre-War Stalinism. Life under the Totalitarian Dictator

RS316U - History of Religion in the U.S. 25% Persuasive Essay Peer Editors:

Houston Graduate School of Theology I. Course Description II. Student Learning Outcomes III. Textbook Required Textbook

Spiritual Formation and Guidance GB 5553

SYLLABUS. GE Area C2 Learning Outcomes: Students who have completed a GE sub-area C2 course should be able to:

Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

Introduction to the Modern World History / Fall 2008 Prof. William G. Gray

Accelerated English II Summer reading: Due August 5, 2016*

GCSE History Revision

History 247: The Making of Modern Britain, College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University Fall 2016, CAS 226 MWF 10-11am

Anti-Semitism and History HST Mon 6:30-9:15pm Morton 212 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny, Spring 2012

Spiritual Formation and Guidance GB 5553

DESCRIPTION TEXTS EVALUATION

HSTR th Century Europe

Modern France: Society, Culture, Politics

Introduction to Political Thought: POL-103 REVISED 1/8/18 Spring 2018 MWF, 9:30 am - 10:20 pm Johns Hall, 212

History Europe Since 1789 Peter Weisensel Course Overview: Readings:

What was the significance of the WW2 conferences?

Access to History Online OCR European and World History Period Studies Russia: From Autocracy to Communism, Standard AS Question

Checking Your Arguments

The Idea of Europe. History 510:401 European Studies 360:401. Svanur Pétursson Fall Center for European Studies, Seminar Room

GOV 312 P: Constitutional Principles: Core Texts Spring 2018 Unique Number: CLA 0128: Monday, Wednesday, Friday 2:00-3:00 pm

Department of Classical Studies CS 3904G: The Life and Legacy of Julius Caesar Course Outline

World History. 2. Leader Propaganda Posters Jigsaw (50) 3. Exit ticket (10)

Syllabus Religion 121: Book of Mormon (1 Nephi - Alma 29) Instructor: Julie B. Lundin

Syllabus for PRM 661 Introduction to Preaching 3 Credit Hours Fall 2013

GSTR 310 Understandings of Christianity: The Global Face of Christianity Fall 2010

Early Lives JOSEPH STALIN ADOLF HITLER. Family life. Family life. Early political life. Early political life. Leadership qualities

Boston College Mission Statement. Course Description

Mystery of Contemporary Russian History

AP European History. Sample Student Responses and Scoring Commentary. Inside: Short Answer Question 4. Scoring Guideline.

Jesus: Sage, Savior, Superstar RLGS 300 Alfred University Fall 2009

Stalin s Dictatorship: USSR, GCSE History Revision Notes. By Dane O Neill

Writing a Literary Essay

US Strategies in the Middle East

WM 601 World Mission of the Church Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Charlotte Summer 2018 Brent Burdick, D. Min.

HIS 315K: United States,

ENCOUNTERING EVIL: SUFFERING IN THE RELIGIONS OF THE WORLD REL 140 4/5 DESCRIPTION

An Introductory to the Middle East. Cleveland State University Spring 2018

Social Theory. Universidad Carlos III, Fall 2015 COURSE OVERVIEW COURSE REQUIREMENTS

How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives. - Annie Dillard, author Pilgrim at Tinkers Creek

Spring 2019 Wed. 6:30-9:30 LSHV Jan. 16 April 23 Prof. Frederick Ruf. William James: Writings, Letters, Life

What words or phrases did Stalin use that contributed to the inflammatory nature of his speech?

Jewish History II: Jews in the Modern World

ANGELS, DEMONS, AND MAGIC IN EARLY CHRISTIANITY RS 353 / MEL 321

AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY 563:345; 512:345 Tuesday/Thursday 1:10-2:30PM Hardenburg B5 Spring 2013

Enlightenment and Revolution in the Atlantic World

Syllabus for BIB 421 Pentateuch 3.0 Credit Hours Spring The purpose of this course is to enable the student to do the following:

University of Haifa Weiss-Livnat International MA Program in Holocaust Studies

Syllabus for GTHE 571 Church History I - ONLINE 3 Credit Hours Fall 2015

Modern Europe- Cooke January, 2015 Modern Europe Midterm Study Guide

Emergence of Josef Stalin. By Mr. Baker

Mailbox: Baker Hall 135. I check my mailbox each day in case you want to drop something off for me to read.

History 145 History of World Religions Fall 2015

Name The Crucible: Argument Essay

SYLLABUS: PROPHETS OF THE BIBLE. Hebrew Studies 332/Jewish Studies 332/Religious Studies 332/Lit Trans :00 A.M. 12:15 P. M.

GODS, MYTHS, RELIGIONS IN A SECULAR AGE 840:101 Section 01 Monday/Thursday 10.55am-12.15pm Douglass Campus, Thompson Hall 206 Fall 2017

Syllabus for PRM 669 Practice Preaching 3 Credit Hours Fall 2013

Joseph Stalin. Childhood and youth

Andrij Makuch and Frank E. Sysyn, editors. Contextualizing the Holodomor: The Impact of Thirty Years of Ukrainian Famine Studies.

Office Hours: Monday to Friday 9:30 am - 11:00 am (except during Monday Chapel)

THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY 2825 Lexington Road Louisville, KY 40280

Required Reading: 1. Corrigan, et al. Jews, Christians, Muslims. NJ: Prentice Hall, Individual readings on Blackboard.

Existentialism. Course number PHIL 291 section A1 Fall 2014 Tu-Th 9:30-10:50am ED 377

Animal farm. by George orwell. All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others

UNITED METHODIST POLITY (MS1062)

Review A. Solzhenitsyn: Two hundred years together

INDIAN RELIGIONS AND PHILOSOPHIES: THE HISTORY OF HINDUISM REL

Religion, Media and Hollywood: Faith in TV

INDIAN RELIGIONS AND PHILOSOPHIES: THE HISTORY OF HINDUISM REL

Introduction to Christian Theology I. THEO Summer 2018 Boston College Stokes Hall 121N Monday and Wednesday 6:00-9:15pm

INTRODUCTION TO HINDUISM ANS 301M (30428) DESCRIPTION TEXTS

HISTORY 3523 MODERN EUROPE (FROM THE FRENCH REVOLUTION TO THE EUROPEAN UNION) University of Arkansas at Monticello Fall 2014

Medieval Russia Christian Raffensperger History 251H/C - 1W Fall Semester MWF 11:30-12:30 Hollenbeck 318

20 th Century Political Thought Dr. Carl Scott GO 351B, Fall 2010 Office: Ladd 306A, ext. 5235

Syllabus for PRM 669 Practice Preaching 2 Credit Hours Fall 2010

Transcription:

Prof. Charters Wynn HIS 350L: 39935 Office: GAR 1.120 Spring 2014 Phone: 475-7234 CLA 2.606: WF 2-3:15 Office Hours: Monday & Tuesday 2-3 & by Appointment wynn@utexas.edu STALIN S RUSSIA AT WAR It was the Russians who tore the guts out of the German Army. - Winston Churchill Course Description: Violence, famine, and epidemic disease took more than fifty million Soviet lives between 1914 and 1953. Over half of these deaths occurred between 1941 and 1945, when the Soviet Union fought the most savage and immense war in history. No other nation ever endured anything like it. The Soviets defeated the invading Axis powers despite the purge of the military leadership in 1937, horrible mistakes at the outset of the war, and widespread hostility within the country to the Stalinist regime. We will focus on the impact of the Stalinist state s attempt to transform the nation into an industrial power, terror against its own people, the death and destruction during the German occupation, as well as the courage and barbarism in the fight to the death on the Eastern Front, especially during the Battles of Moscow, Leningrad, Stalingrad, Kursk, and Berlin. Evaluating the role of Stalin (or Uncle Joe as the American and British public knew him) and his inner circle, as well as what the Stalinist Revolution and Great Patriotic War meant for ordinary Soviets, will be of particular concern. 1

Grading: This course contains a substantial writing component. During the course of the semester students will write three critical analyses of assigned reading, five pages in length each. In addition, by 9:30 a.m. on most class days, students will e-mail me three questions dealing with that day s reading. You will also write a peer review on each of the three essays. The final grade is based on both the written assignments (50% essays; 10% questions; peer review, 5%) and the extent and quality of classroom participation (30%). Late papers/questions will be penalized. While NSP rules permit students three unexcused absences, in this discussion-based seminar any unexcused absences will negatively impact the class participation grade. *Students with disabilities may request appropriate academic accommodations from Services for Students with Disabilities, 471-6259. *For an explanation of academic dishonesty, students should consult the Office of Student Judicial Services at http://deanofstudents.utexas.edu/sjs/. Writing Tips: 1. You are encouraged to discuss the topic with classmates but the essay you write must be your own work. 2. State your argument in your opening paragraph. Do so quickly and concisely and as forcefully as possible. 3. Support your argument by specific references to evidence from the readings. Also confront the opposing argument and state your reasons for rejecting it. 4. The topic sentence of each of your supporting paragraphs should state the aspect of the topic you wish to discuss. 5. Use the last paragraph to summarize your argument briefly. Let it mirror your first paragraph. 6. Avoid excessive or unnecessary detail. You are writing for an audience (me) who knows what happened and has done the reading. 7. Quote to add punch. Do not quote often or use long quotations. 8. Avoid the passive voice. Write about the past in the past tense. 9. Try to write as simply and directly as possible. Omit needless words. 10. Your essay, due at the beginning of class, must be typed, double-spaced, spellchecked, and grammatically correct. Texts: John Scott, Behind the Urals. Lydia Chukovskaya, Sofia Petrovna. Arthur Koestler, Darkness at Noon. Alexander Solzhenitsyn, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. Richard Overy, Russia s War. Catherine Merridale, Ivan s War. Geoffrey Roberts, Victory at Stalingrad. Elena Kozhina, Through the Burning Steppe Course Packet. An asterisk next to a reading in the weekly schedule indicates a selection from the Packet. The Packet is available from Paradigm, 407 W. 24 th St., 472-7986. #Online: Download or Read Online at University of Texas Libraries 2

WEEKLY SCHEDULE WEEK ONE: Introduction Wednesday, January 15 Film Clip: Why We Fight: The Battle of Russia Friday, January 17 Reading: Merridale, 1-22 Overy xi-xxi #Naimark, Stalin s Genocides, 1-29 WEEK TWO: Revolutionary Russia and the Rise of Stalin Wednesday, January 22 Reading: *Brooks & Chernyavskiy, 1-31 Father Gapon s Petition (Handout) Overy, 1-12 Friday, January 24 Reading: Overy, 13-16 #Naimark, Stalin s Genocides, 30-50 Film: The Life and Times of Joseph Stalin WEEK THREE: Forced Collectivization & Famine Wednesday, January 29 Reading: Overy, 16-17, 22-23 *Hindus, Red Bread Friday, January 31 Reading: #Naimark, Dekulakization & The Holodomor Film: Harvest of Despair WEEK FOUR: Breakneck Industrialization Wednesday, February 5 Reading: Scott, ix-92 Overy, 18-20 Merridale, 33-43 Friday, February 7 Reading: Scott, 95-170, 209-266 3

WEEK FIVE: The Great Terror Wednesday, February 12: Essay #1 Due Reading: Overy, 24-25 *Conquest, The Kirov Murder *Knight, 1 December: The Murder *Leone, Did Stalin Kill Kirov and Does It Matter? *Getty, Growing Tension in 1935 Friday, February 14 Reading: Chukovskaya, 1-120 WEEK SIX: Fear and Belief in the Terror Wednesday, February 19 Reading: Overy, 21-33 Merridale, 44-48 Scott, 173-206 Discussion of Film: Burnt by the Sun Friday, February 21 Reading: * Bukharin s Letter to Stalin Koestler, 1-96 WEEK SEVEN: From Interrogation to the Gulag Wednesday, February 26 Essay #2 Due Reading: Koestler, 97-272 Friday, February 28 Reading: Solzhenitsyn WEEK EIGHT: How War Came Wednesday, March 5 Reading: Overy, 34-72 Roberts, 17-26 Merridale, 49-81 Film Clip: The Hour before Midnight Friday, March 7 Reading: Overy, 73-98 Merridale, 82-115 Film Clip: The Goths Ride East 4

*** SPRING BREAK *** WEEK NINE: Siege of Leningrad and Battle of Moscow Wednesday, March 19 Reading: Overy, 99-112 *Lincoln, Nine Hundred Days *Bidlack, Survival Strategies Friday, March 21 Reading: Overy, 113-124 Merridale, 116-126 Roberts, 39-45 Film Clip: Why We Fight: The Battle of Russia WEEK TEN: War of Annihilation Wednesday, March 26 Reading: Overy, 125-153 Merridale, 127-170 Roberts, 26-32 Friday, March 28 Reading: Kozhina WEEK ELEVEN: The Battle of Stalingrad Wednesday, April 2 Reading: Overy, 154-170 Roberts, 49-104 Merridale, 171-177 Friday, April 4 Reading: Overy 171-189 Roberts, 107-136 Merridale, 177-186 Discussion of film: Stalingrad WEEK TWELVE: The Battle of Kursk and False Dawn Wednesday, April 9 Reading: Overy, 190-222 Roberts, 139-142 Merridale, 187-225 Film Clip: The Citadel 5

Friday, April 11 Reading: Overy, 223-254 Merridale, 226-280 Roberts, 142-145 Discussion of film: Come and See WEEK THIRTEEN: Victory and the Red Army in German Wednesday, April 16 Reading: Overy, 255-289 Merridale, 281-335 Roberts, 146-161 *Naimark, The Problem of Rape Discussion of Film: A Woman in Berlin Friday, April 18 NO CLASS EASTER WEEKEND WEEK FOURTEEN: Post-War Russia Wednesday, April 23 Reading: Overy, 290-330 Merridale, 336-388 Film clip: The Fall of Berlin Friday, April 25: Essay #3 Due WEEK FIFTEEN Students prepare for the three-week extension of the course (May 4-26) in London, Normandy, Berlin, Cracow, and Warsaw. 6