tamera leggitt aftermath presentation
TRANSCRIPT
Aftermath
of WWI
Tamera Leggitt, University of Phoenix, History 308 Modern European history, May 22, 2014, Instructor: Tiffany Marie Avril, May 26,2014
The World
Confusion
Recession
Anxiety
Women’s MovementWomen Kept things moving
* Building Weapons* In the fields* In the Factories* In the Home
The German Mark Falls
Hyperinflation
Loaf of Bread
Nov 1918: 1 mark
Nov 1922: 163 marks
Sept 1923: 1,500,000 marks
Nov 1923: 200,000,000,000, marks(Trueman, 2000)
(FCSE History, n.d.)
Buying Vegetables with Baskets of Notes 1919
The real thing Coca Cola advert 1925
Good luck symbol 1907
Hitler Youth 1922
Clara Bow: American Actress 1925
Ancient Thought 1910
German Society
Terms used to describe
the period in German
history include
* Confused
* Searching
* Revolutionary
* Apoplectic
* Morally Deficient
* Chaotic
* Violent
* Angry
* Racist
German Political System
Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands, Communist Party of Germany
Deutsches Reich, German Reich,
Weimar Republic
Nazi Party
Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei
National Socialist Party
France Economic
French Society
Images Daily Mail UK
French Politics
Is where all sectors of society, business, the military and labor are working in the public interest.
State Corporatism
Is a free market concept where the corporations, businesses and individuals have control over the economic system without government controls or protections.
Capitalism
Is where all resources of the region are pooled for the use of all. There are no classes everyone lives on an equal economic level.
Communism
Economic Systems
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Vox: http://www.voxeu.org/article/china-s-dollar-trap-lessons-france-s-1920s-sterling-trap• Agence France Presse. (2014, May 12). People are Still Clearing Out Deadly WWI Mines From Northeastern France. Retrieved
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Oxford: Oxford University Press.• Tomlinson, S. (2013, February 21). The World War One Wasteland: Haunting rare images show apocalyptic destruction on the
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• Trueman, C. (2000). Hyperinflation and Weimar Germany. Retrieved May 24, 2014, from History Learning Site: http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/hyperinflation_weimar_germany.htm
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Life: http://gaskinbalrog.blogspot.com/2013/02/the-death-of-hammer-and-sickle.html• Chin, S. (2009, November 11). End of WWI. Retrieved May 22, 2014, from Siong Chin: http://siongchin.com/blog/?p=2230• FCSE History. (n.d.). Germany During the Great Depression. Retrieved May 24, 2014, from FCSE History:
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book=London+Geographical+Institute+-+The+Peoples+Atlas• History, A. (2013, January 7). The Road to War: Germany: 1919-1939. Retrieved from Authentic History: http://www.authentichistory.com/1930-
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http://www.picturehistory.com/product/id/7631• Tomlinson, S. (2013, February 21). The World War One Wasteland: Haunting rare images show apocalyptic destruction on the Western Front.
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