archived from: http://wnt.utexas.edu/~colawnt/students/courses/coursedetail.cfm?courseID=2672
University of Texas at Austin, Spring 2004
HIS 350L Germany Since Hitler-1933 to the present

Days Time Instructor
MW
3:00 PM- 4:30 PM
CREW

Prerequisites
Upper-division standing required. Consent of instructor must be obtained. Course Description
This seminar will analyze the effects of Hitler's dictatorship upon German society, politics, economy and culture. It will explore the consequences of defeat, occupation, the Cold War and the political division of Germany after 1945. It will also compare and contrast the history and development of East and West Germany in the years between 1949 and 1989. Finally, the course will examine some of the consequences and prospects created by the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 and the unification of the two Germanies in 1990.

Contains a substantial writing component and fulfills part of the basic education requirement in writing.

Course Requirements
This is a "significant writing component course". You will be required to write four critical analyses (6-8 pages each) of selected readings from the assigned reading list (each of these four essays is worth 20% of your final grade). Class participation counts for 20 % of your final grade.

Texts
Peter Fritzsche, GERMANS INTO NAZIS (Cambridge, Mass., 1998)

David Crew, editor, NAZISM AND GERMAN SOCIETY, 1933-1945 (London and New York,1995)

Primo Levi, SURVIVAL IN AUSCHWITZ

Hanna Schissler,editor, THE MIRACLE YEARS. A CULTURAL HISTORY OF WEST GERMANY 1949-1968 (Princeton,2001)

Konrad Jarausch (editor), DICTATORSHIP AS EXPERIENCE:TOWARDS A SOCIO-CULTURAL HISTORY OF THE GDR (Providence, 1999)

Peter Schneider, THE WALL JUMPER. A BERLIN STORY (Chicago,1983)

Timothy Garton Ash, THE FILE: PERSONAL HISTORY (Vintage Books, 1998)

Daphne Berdahl, WHERE THE WORLD ENDED. RE-UNIFICATION AND IDENTITY IN THE GERMAN BORDERLAND (Berkeley/Los Angeles/London, 1999)


archived Nov. 2004 for UCSB Hist 133c; back to courses & resources page