HISTORY MODERN GERMANY FALL SEMESTER 2010 Western Michigan University T-Th 2-3:15 Dunbar 3203

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HISTORY 4495 --MODERN GERMANY FALL SEMESTER 2010 Western Michigan University T-Th 2-3:15 Dunbar 3203 Dr. Eli Rubin, PhD Office: 4418 Friedmann Hall 387-4646 eli.rubin@wmich.edu Office hours: Mondays 2-4 pm or by appointment Good: Mozart, Beethoven, Einstein, Oppenheimer, Von Braun, Heisenberg, Kant, Freud, Luther. Beer. Volkswagen Beetles. Dirk Nowitzki. Beer. David Hasselhoff. Beer. Mercedes, Audi, BMW. Beer. Most common ethnic origin of Americans. Beer. Half of Wisconsinites and Pennsylvanians. Most educated and well-read people on the planet. Third strongest economy on the planet. Secondhighest per capita beer consumption on the planet. Bad: Hitler. Nazis. Communists. Death camps. Torture cells. Secret Police. Berlin Wall. Genocide. Holocaust. Forced evacuation. Forced sterilization. Two World Wars, three 19 th century wars against neighbors, and a 30-year war in the 17 th century. Obsession with hygiene and orderliness. Obsession with authority. Hostility to democracy. Hostility to foreigners. Antisemitism. Continual and ongoing disrespect for neighbors, especially Poles and Czechs. Hostility to Russia. Sympathy for Russia. Antipathy to the United States. Bad popular music (exception: David Hasselhoff). What gives? How can one country not only be so bifurcated but so extreme in its bifurcation? How could the same country that gave us Mozart and Mercedes also have given us Adolf and Auschwitz? Recently, Günther Grass, German novelist we will study, considered to be among the greatest novelists of the last 100 years, revealed that he was in the Waffen-SS. The VW-Beetle, the best selling car in the world over the last 50 years and one of the coolest cars ever made, was designed by Hitler himself. Are these clues to understanding modern Germany? Could it be that the good and the bad are somehow intertwined? That, as another famous German philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, once said: Where the danger grows, so also grows the saving power? This is the big question that will underlie our investigation this semester. Each reading, discussion, lecture, and assignment will be shaped with an eye to answering this paradox. The closer you can get to an answer, the more thought you give this paradox, the higher your grade will most likely be.

Course Goals At the end of this class, you should be able to explain Germany s role in both World Wars, the roots of Nazism, communism and democracy in Germany s 20 th century, the roots of the cold war, basic aspects of life on both sides of the Berlin Wall, the causes and the effects of the fall of the Wall, and the challenges facing a contemporary democratic, capitalist, and ethnically diverse German society. Writing: This is a baccalaureate writing level class. It is the highest level class in the History Department s undergraduate curriculum, and thus the highest level of work is expected of you. There are three writing assignments, all of them substantial in length (at least ten pages utilizing both primary and secondary sources). In accordance with baccalaureate writing policy, you will have the opportunity to rewrite your first two papers for a higher grade. These papers must be turned in by Thursday, December 9th, 5 pm in my mailbox at the latest. Each of the paper assignments is worth 100 points. Each day that they are late is 10 points. I prefer that they not be e-mailed to me; if it is absolutely necessary, I require that they be in the following file formats:.doc;.docx;.rtf;.txt;.pdf. I cannot open.wps documents. I will also give you detailed information on what is expected of you in these papers, and how these expectations correlate to your grade on them. You will be graded by deducting points for various inadequacies, counting backwards from 100. Each deduction will be explained in a separate document. In some cases, papers that are unacceptable for this level of coursework will be returned with no grade and I will simply ask you to start over. We will also spend time in class discussing writing and its requirements. As a general rule, the writing assignments will be based on the class readings, and some use of outside sources will be required as well. Final Exam You will be given a take home exam, which will be due at the end of the semester. This is worth 100 points. It is cumulative, and written, not multiple choice. You will receive this on the last day of class and will have one week to finish it. Class structure As a general rule, Tuesdays will be devoted to lecture and Thursdays to reading discussion. Sometimes, there will be activities involved. For each discussion, there will people chosen to give reactions to the reading in class, generally, three people per class. There will also be discussion questions distributed by e-mail about the readings a few days before discussion. We will at one point be watching a film related to the course, Goodbye Lenin. You are required to come to class both days. You are allowed two unexcused absences, after that, you need a valid excuse to miss class. Class participation You have a class participation grade of 100 points. You are graded differently for lectures and discussions: for lectures, you must show up on time, and behave

respectfully during lecture. This means no laptops or other electronic or wireless devices unless I give you permission. No sleeping, talking, or other distracting behavior. You can earn a maximum of 4 points for each lecture. For discussions, you must come on time and exhibit good behavior; you must also bring your reading materials and have them out so I know you have them, you must bring your answers to the discussion questions and have these out and visible, and you must participate in the discussions actively. You can earn a maximum of 4 points per discussion. There are 14 lectures and 13 discussions, and this equals more than 100 points (108 to be exact) the extra 8 points are your free unexcused absences; you can therefore earn extra credit for showing up for all class periods. Extra Credit In addition to getting 8 extra point for coming to all classes, there is also a very important lecture. If you attend this lecture, you will get 50 extra credit points, which is enough to raise your grade an entire grade. Yes, it s that important. The talk is by Dr. Mark Roseman, historian of Indiana University and Senior Research Fellow at the United States Holocaust History Museum in Washington, DC. He is one of the leading scholars on the history of Nazism and the Holocaust in the entire world. The History Department, and myself personally, have invited him. The talk is entitled Hitler s Henchmen and should be a preview of his cutting-edge research on Nazi perpetrators in the Holocaust. It is Thursday, Sept. 23 rd, from 4-5:30 pm, in the Black and Gold room of the Bernhardt center. Grading There is therefore a total of 500 points you can acquire (508 points if you come to every class, 558 if you go to every class and the Roseman lecture). To determine your final grade, I simply double your total points and convert that to the University s grading scale, which is: 100-93 = A 92-88 = BA 87-83 = B 82-78 = CB 77-73 = C 72-68 = DC 67-60 = D Under 60 = E (Failing) So for example if your total grade were a 450, you would have a 900, or, a 90, which equals a BA as a final grade. Required readings (for sale in the WMU bookstore): Anton Kaes, Martin Jay and Edward Dimendberg, eds.: The Weimar Republic Sourcebook (University of California Press)

Hans Fallada: Every Man Dies Alone (Melville House) Albert Speer: Inside the Third Reich: Memoirs (Ishi Press/Simon & Schuster Press) Anonymous: A Woman in Berlin: Eight Weeks in the Conquered City (Picador) Gitta Sereny: Into that Darkness: An Examination of Conscience (Vintage Books) Eli Rubin: Synthetic Socialism: Plastics and Dictatorship in the German Democratic Republic (University of North Carolina Press) Martin Klimke: The Other Alliance: Student Protest in West Germany and the United States in the Global Sixties (Princeton University Press) Schedule of Lectures, Discussions and Assignments Week One Tuesday, September 7 th Lecture: World War One and its Aftermath Thursday, September 9 th Discussion: Introduction. Reading: Impossible Border Introduction and chapter 2, Now We Were the Border Week Two Tuesday, September 14 th Lecture: Weimar I: Politics and Crisis Thursday, September 16 th Discussion: Weimar Political Speed Dating-- Reading: Weimar Republic Sourcebook documents 13, 15, 42, 43, 47, 49, 126, 127, 136, 140 Receive First Writing Assignment Week Three Tuesday, September 21 st Lecture: Weimar II: Cultural Revolt and Modernism Thursday, September 23 rd Discussion: Fun with Weimar Art! / Reading: Weimar Republic Sourcebook, documents 166, 167, 174, 178, 188, 190, 195, 228, 233

Talk: Mark Roseman, Indiana University / United States Holocaust History Museum: Hitler s Henchmen 4-5:30 pm Brown and Gold Room, Bernhardt Center Week Four Tuesday, September 28 th Lecture: Collapse of the Weimar Republic and Rise of Nazism Thursday, September 30 th Discussion: Speer, Inside the Third Reich pps. 1-230 Week Five Tuesday, October 5 th Lecture: Inside the Third Reich Thursday, October 7 th Discussion: Speer, Inside the Third Reich pps. 230-end Week Six Tuesday, October 12 th Lecture: World War Two from Poland to Stalingrad Thursday, October 14 th Discussion: Reading: Fallada, Every Man Dies Alone First writing assignment due in class Thursday; receive second writing assignment Week Seven Tuesday, October 19 th Lecture: The Holocaust from the Ghettos to the Gas Chambers Thursday, October 21 st Discussion: Sereny, Into that Darkness Week Eight Tuesday, October 26 th Lecture: Defeat, Destruction, Rape and Justice/New Research Thursday, October 28 th Discussion: Anonymous, A Woman in Berlin

Week Nine Tuesday, November 2 nd Lecture: When worlds collide: the beginning of the Cold War, 1946-1953/ Americanization and Miracles, West Germany from 1950-1968 Thursday, November 4 th Discussion: Rubin Synthetic Socialism Week Ten Tuesday, November 9 th Lecture: / Consumption, Stabilization and Ostpolitik in East Germany Thursday, November 11 th Discussion: Rubin Synthetic Socialism Second writing assignment due; receive third and final writing assignment Week Eleven Tuesday, November 16 th Lecture: From 1968 to the German Autumn: leftwing radicalism in West Germany and across the Atlantic (guest talk by Dr. Martini, Dept. of History, WMU) Thursday, November 18 th Discussion: Klimke, The Other Alliance Week Twelve Tuesday, November 23 rd Lecture: Vergangenheitsbewältigung (Memory Battles) Thursday, November 25 th No class: Thanksgiving Week Thirteen Tuesday, November 30 th Lecture: Multiculturalism Thursday, December 2 nd Discussion: (Begin film viewing: Goodbye Lenin)

Week Fourteen Tuesday, December 7 th Lecture: The Fall of the Wall Thursday, December 9 th Discussion: Film viewing, finish Goodbye Lenin Third writing assignment due. Receive Take-Home Final Exam Thursday, December 15 th Take-home exams due by e-mail to me at eli.rubin@wmich.edu