Title: Europe and the Western Hemisphere Since 1945
1Europe and the Western Hemisphere Since 1945
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2Recovery and Renewal in Europe
- Western Europe The Triumph of Democracy
- The economic aid of the Marshall Plan allowed
Western European countries to recover rapidly - Industrial production surpassed previous records
in 1950s-1970s - Western Europe experienced almost full employment
- France From De Gaulle to New Uncertainties
- Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970), 1958-1969
- Fourth Republic
- Algerian crisis
- Fifth Republic, 1958
- Greater global presence
- Growth of the economy
- Weaknesses in the 1970s
3France From de Gaulle to New Uncertainties
- François Mitterrand (1916-1995), 1981-1995
- Reforms and nationalization
- Economic weaknesses of the 1990s
- Jacques Chirac (b. 1932) elected president, May
1995
4From West Germany to Germany
- Konrad Adenauer (1876-1967), 1949-1963
- Ludwig Erhard and economic recovery
- Willy Brandt (1913-1992), 1969-1974
- Ostpolitik (opening toward the east)
- Helmut Kohl (b. 1930), 1982
- Reunification
- Problems with reunification
5Decline of Great Britain
- Clement Attlee (1883-1967) succeeded Churchill
- Creation of the modern welfare state
- Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925), 1979-1990
- Thatcherism
- Problems over flat-rate tax
- Thatcher resigned, November 1990
- Thatcher succeeded by John Major and then Tony
Blair
6Eastern Europe After Communism
- Fall of Communist governments in Eastern Europe
in 1989 - New governments scrapped old system and replaced
it with democratic procedures and market systems - Desire to join NATO and European Union
7The Disintegration of Yugoslavia
- Marshal Tito managed 6 republics and 2 autonomous
provinces as Yugoslavia - After his death in 1980, reform movements swept
in - Slovenia and Croatia declared independence in
June 1991 - Slobodan Milosevic, leader of Serbia, opposed
action and attacked these states - Captured 1/3 of Croatia, unsuccessful against
Slovenia - Macedonia and Bosnia and Herzegovina declared
their independence - Milosevic ethnic cleansing on Bosnia and
acquired 70 of territory - European nations and U.S. intervened -cease-fire
agreement in 1995 - 1999, Milosevic led ethnic cleansing campaign
against Kosovars - U.S. and NATO forced Milosevic to stop
- Milosevic was tried for war crimes against
humanity. - He died in 2006 during the trial.
- Montenegro declared independence in 2006.
- all 6 republics of Yugoslavia in 1918 now
independent nations
8The New Russia From Empire to Nation
- President Boris Yeltsin with a new constitution
- Two-chamber parliament
- Course towards a pluralistic political system and
a market economy - Economic inequality and rampant corruption
- War in Caucasus Chechnya wants independence
9The Putin Era
- Vladimir Putin, former member of KGB
- Centralized power in the hands of the federal
government - Regulate political parties
- Silence critics, especially the media
- Vowed to bring Chechnya back into Russia
- Restored Russias position as an influential
force in the world - Widespread sense of unease and decline of the
social disorder - Alcoholism, sexual promiscuity, criminal
activities, disintegration of traditional family
system - Still attempts to restore pride and discipline in
Russian society
10The Unification of Europe
- NATO formed in 1949
- European Economic Community (EEC) created in
1957 France, West Germany, the Benelux
Countries and Italy - Eliminated customs barriers for ember nations
- Crated a free-trade area protected by a common
external tariff - Renamed European Community
- New Members Great Britain, Ireland, Denmark,
Greece, Spain, Portugal, Austria, Finland, and
Sweden
11The European Union
- By 2000, EC had 370 million people
- Worlds largest single trading entity
- ¼ of worlds commerce
- 1994, the European Community became the European
Union (EU) - An economic and monetary union
- Common currency the euro
- Established a common agricultural policy
- Ended national passports
12European Union, 2004
13Toward a United Europe
- New goal to incorporate into the union the
states of eastern and southeastern Europe - 10 new members Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia,
Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland,
Slovakia, and Slovenia - EU population - 455 million people
14Emergence of the Superpower The United States
- American Politics and Society Through the Vietnam
Era - Economic boom after World War II
- John F. Kennedy (1917-1963), 1961-1963
- Lyndon Johnson (1908-1973), 1963-1969
- Martin Luther King (1929-1968)
- Desegregation, Civil Rights Act, 1964
- Voting Rights Act, 1965
- Race riots 1965-1967
- Vietnam War, Anti-war protests
- Richard Nixon (1913-1994) elected in 1968
15Shift Rightward after 1973
- Nixons presidency
- Watergate
- Jimmy Carter (b. 1924), 1976-1980
- Stagflation high inflation and decline in
earnings - 53 hostages held by Iran
- Ronald Reagan (b. 1911), 1981-1989
- Reverses the welfare state
- Military buildup
- Deficit spending problems
- George H.W. Bush (b. 1924)
- Bill Clinton elected in 1992
- Supported many Republican issues
- Period of economic growth
- Charges of misconduct and impeachment
16George W. Bush
- George W. Bush elected in 2000
- Bush lost popular vote to Al Gore, won the
electoral vote after a highly controversial
victory in the state of Florida - First 4 years War on Terrorism and U.S.-led war
on Iraq - Tax cuts favored wealthy and produced record
deficits - Environmental laws weakened
- In 2004, Bush elected for a second term
- In 2005, Bushs popularity plummeted as
discontent grew over war in Iraq and financial
corruption in Republic Party - Poor handling of relief efforts after Hurricane
Katrina
17The Development of Canada
- After WW II, Canada had economic prosperity
- Pursuit of industrial development electronic,
aircraft, nuclear, chemical engineering
industries - After 1945, Liberal Party dominated Canadian
Politics - Lester Pearson (1897-1972)
- created a welfare state with national social
security system and national health insurance
plan - Pierre Trudeau (1919-2000), most prominent
Liberal government - industrialization and inflation
- Brian Mulroney, Conservative Prime Minister
- Sought greater privatization of state-run
corporations - Entered free trade agreement with the U.S.,
NAFTA, which was resented by Canadians
18Canada
- Jean Crétien, Liberal Prime Minister
- Conservative fiscal policies with strong economic
growth yielded a surplus - Reelected in 1997
- Stephen Harper, Conservative Prime Minister
- Financial corruption in Crétiens party brought
another Conservative government
19Latin America Since 1945
- Great Depression led to political instability
that brought on military coups and militaristic
regimes - Great Depression helped shift from a traditional
to modern economic structure - With exports cut in half and unable to buy
foreign manufactured goods, Latin America
developed its own industries - Without private capital from trade, governments
invested in new industries steel in Chile and
Brazil and oil in Argentina and Mexico - By the 1960s, Latin America still economically
dependent on U.S. Europe and now Japan - Great poverty, small domestic markets, failure to
find foreign markets for their products led to
instability and a reliance on military regimes - Needed to curb the power of new industrial middle
class and working class
20Latin America, contd
- 1960s, repressive military regimes in Chile,
Brazil, and Argentina - Abolished political parties
- Returned to export-import economies financed by
foreigners - 1970s, debt crisis from borrowing from abroad
- 1980s, movement toward democracy wanted basic
rights and fee and fair elections - Organization of American States
- During Cold War, the U.S. grew anxious about
communism in Central America and the Caribbean - U.S. returned to policy of unilateral action to
prevent another Cuba - U.S. provided military aid to anti-communist
regimes
21South America
22The Threat of Maxist Revolutions The Example
of Cuba
- Since 1934, Cuba ruled by dictator, Fulgencio
Batista, who had close economic ties to American
investors - Fidel Castro led the opposition movement along
with Ernesto Che Guevara - Batista lost support after a brutal attack on
Castros movement and fled Cuba - Castro seized Havana on January 1, 1959
23Cuba
- Soviet Union provided 100 million in credits and
agreed to buy Cuban sugar - U.S. imposed trade embargo on Cuba driving Castro
closer to the Soviets - U.S. breaks diplomatic relations with Cuba in
1961 - President Kennedy supported a coup attempt
against Castro - Bay of Pigs invasion was a military disaster
for U.S. - Cuban Missile Crisis
- Castros social revolution had mixed results
- Gains in health care and education
- Agricultural diversification but still reliant
upon sugar - Collapse of the Soviet Union meant the end of
Soviet subsidies
24Nationalism and the Military The Example of
Argentina
- Group of officers overthrows government, June
1943 - Juan Perón (1895-1974), elected president 1946
- Increased industrialization
- Frees Argentina from foreign investors
- Eva Perón
- Overthrown by the military 1955
- Returns in 1973 and elected president, died in
1974
25Juan and Eva Peron
26Argentina
- Military seizes power, 1976
- Disappearance of opponents
- Falkland Islands (Malvinas) War, April 1982
- Return of civil power in 1983
- Raul Alfonsin
- reestablished democratic practices
- Carlos Saul Menem
- elected in 1989 with peaceful transfer of power
- Néstor Kirchner
- Problems of foreign debt and inflation with some
economic growth
27Mexican Way
- Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) controls
Mexican politics - Industrial growth in 1950s and 1960s
- Student protests, 1968
- One party system protested
- Protest in Tlatelolco Square
- Political reform Luis Echeverria and Jose
Portillo in 1970s - Registering political parties
- Freedom of debate in press and at universities
28Mexico
- Foreign debt
- Oil reserves discovered making Mexico dependent
of these revenues - Mid-1980s oil prices drop and Mexico could no
longer service its debts - Vicente Fox defeats the PRI to be elected
president, 2000 - Failed to deal with police corruption and
bureaucratic inefficiency
29Society and Culture in the Western World
- The Emergence of a New Society
- The technocratic society
- Changes in the middle class managers and
technicians - Changes among the traditional lower class
- Leisure activity
- Education
- Student protests of the 60s and 70s
- Student radicalism
30Society and Culture in the Western World,
contd
- The Permissive Society
- Sexual revolution
- Breakdown of the traditional family
- Drug culture
31A Love-in
32Women in the Postwar World
- The return to traditional roles and the baby boom
- Smaller families due to birth control
- More women enter the work force
- Working women at lower wages
- The Feminist Movement The Search for Liberation
- More women gain the right to vote after World War
II - By the 1960s women began to assert their rights
- Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986), The Second Sex
- Argues that living in a male-dominated society,
women have been defined by their differences from
men and consequently receive second-class status
33Transformation of Womens Lives
- Women need to average 2.1 children in order to
ensure a natural replacement of a countrys
population - Increasing number of women in the workforce
- Womens liberation movement
- Control over their own bodies
- Political activism
- Ecological activity
- Women reach out to other women
34The Growth of Terrorism
- Munich Olympic games, 1972
- Motivations
- Militant nationalism seeking separate states
- Attacks against the ruling government the IRA
- Palestinian terrorists
- Angry over the loss of land
- Rome and Vienna, 1985
- State sponsored terrorism
- Pan American flight 103, December 21, 1988
35Terrorist Attack on the United States
- Attack on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, September 11, 2001 - Al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden
- U.S. and NATO attack on Taliban-controlled
centers and al-Qaeda hiding places in
Afghanistan - Afghan forces assisted by U.S. pushed Taliban out
- Installed new democratic multiethnic government
- Continues to face revived Taliban activity
36The Environment and the Green Movements
- Ecological problems
- Major political parties in Europe to advocate new
regulations to protect the environment - Chernobyl, Ukraine, 1986
- Green Parties
- Germany, Sweden, Austria, Switzerland
37Western Culture Since 1945
- Western world saw diversity and innovation
intellectually and culturally - New direction in 1970s postmodern cultural
world - Postwar Literature
- Theater of the Absurd
- Samuel Becket (1906-1990), Waiting for Godot
- Post-war disillusionment
- Fixed ideological beliefs in politics or religion
inspired existentialism meaning and existence
38Literature, contd
- Albert Camus (1913-1960) Jean-Paul Sartre
(1905-1980) - Sense of worlds meaninglessness
- Bleak worldview of absurdist drama and literature
- With absence of God in universe, humans had no
preordained destiny and utterly alone with no
future and no hope, but with one source of hope
themselves.
39Postmodernism
- 1970s postmodern covers intellectual and
artistic styles and ways of thinking - It rejects modern Western belief in an objective
truth - Focuses on relative nature of reality and
knowledge - Jacques Derrida (1930-2004)
- Poststructuralism or deconstruction
- Culture is created and can be analyzed according
to the manner in which people create their own
meaning - No fixed truth or universal meaning
- Michel Foucault (1926-1984)
- Explored relationships of power
- power is exercised, rather than possessed
- The diffusion of power and oppression marks all
relationship
40Postmodernism in Literature
- Central and Eastern Europe
- Milan Kundera (b. 1929) of Czechoslovakia,
- The Unbearable Lightness of Being, 1984
- Speaks to using love as a way to a better life
rather than despairing because of the political
repression - Human spirit can be lessened but not destroyed.
41Trends in Art
- Following WWII, U.S. dominated art world and
popular culture - New York City replaced Paris as the artistic
center of the West - Guggenheim Museum, MOMA, Whitney, art galleries
promoted modern art and helped determine artistic
tastes throughout the world - Abstract Expressionism action painting
- Jackson Pollock (1912-1956)
- Postmodern architecture of late 1970s
- Modernist glass box of 1980s
42The World of Science and Technology
- Government and military sponsorship of science
- Radar, rockets, jets, computers, atomic bomb
- First computer to break German secret codes
- Questioning of science and technology
43The Explosion of Popular Culture
- Popular Culture and Americanization of the World
- Motion pictures
- Popular music
- Sports
- Satellite television
44Discussion Questions
- What political, social, and economic changes has
the United States experienced since 1945? - What problems have the nations of Latin America
faced since 1945, and what role has Marxist
ideology played in their efforts to solve these
problems? - What major social, cultural, and intellectual
developments have occurred in Western Europe and
North America since 1945?