Civ final

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Very near the end of the film's portrayal of Gandhi, Gandhi suggests to Margaret Bourke-White (the photo-journalist) that he has often failed in his most constant and difficult struggle in life. What struggle/battle is this?

"the devils", in his own heart, not a good warrior, thinks that he failed- he tried to offer the world a way out but he does not see It and either does the world.

Reflect upon all that you learned about Josephine Baker in the documentary film about her. describe two distressing challenges that she faced, and two satisfying or victorious experiences that she had:

-challenge: She was never accepted as famous in the US until later in life. She had gone on tour in Europe and was still not allowed a hotel room -challenge: the fact that she was black. She was never going to be looked at as a regular to the whites. When she went to dinner at this fancy restaurant, she never got served satisfying: was able to talk at the march on Washington during the Civil Rights movement. She was the only women that was asked to speak. satisfying: able to adopt 12 kids from all different races.

Identify one historical or cultural event that was significant in creating the Harlem Renaissance

1. Great Migration 2. Jazz music

Name two or three skills that Helen or her family members develop because they are so poor.

1. Helen learned how to manage money well 2. had to learn how to start a fire

The Kindness of strangers: Briefly describe five examples of strangers coming to the aid of Helen or any member of her family.

1. Policeman that ordered a pint of milk to be delivered to the door. 2. the old gentleman at Princes Park. The old gentleman listened to Helen, gave her advice and wanted to continue their meeting 3. The Hick's that lived in the basement of the house. They had taken care of Tony when he had gotten sick and they helped them during Christmas. 4. the other policeman that helped the dad get cleaned up and get a job 5. the deaconess. she had gotten Brian and Tony to join the choir at the church and been an advocate for Helen.

The city of Liverpool had, by the 1920s and 30s, some institutions and/or places that enriched and/or comforted Helen during these grueling times. Name and briefly describe two institutions or places:

1. evening school: gave her a sense of hope, she could go by herself and feel like she accomplished something. 2. Carnegie library: she could forget about her life. Also allowed her to have interaction with others outside her family.

In Dr. Moffett's lecture in Weimar art, he showed a triptych (painting with three panels) by Otto Dix called Metropolis. Identify two aspects of Weimar life revealed in Dix's work.

1. gender ambiguity 2. prostitution

Name three specific hardships that plagued Helen or family members:

1. sickness 2. Multrition 3. dirtiness

Class distinctions in Great Britain: Describe two specific examples about when and how the Forresters' received pronunciation accents influenced how residents of Liverpool treated them:

1. when Alan came home with a black eye. Alan got punched in the face for saying that he spoke properly and not like a "half-backed savage". 2. Policeman gave them milk. He first started talking to Helen he was surprised by her clear english, so he started asking more questions. Helen had better english than the policeman did and that impressed him. Her accent could give him insight that she really was struggling which led him to want to help her more.

Place the following events in chronological order by placing the numbers 1,2, and 3 above the events to indicate chronological order Germany attacks the USSR Germany invades Poland Germany invades France

3, 1, 2

Choose two of the following terms below, and for each one, in one-two sentences each, and being as specific as possible, how Marian Anderson's life intersected with that phenomenon: 1. Racist violence in the US 2. European attitudes toward black artists pre-Fascism 3. Victor phonograph recording co. 4. Fascism in Europe 1930s 5. passing

5. Passing: lover at the time and then husband (Orpheus Fisher) married a white women. Orpheus was passing as white when he married this wealthy white women. Marian Anderson was associated with Walter White who led the NAACP. White worked at the NAACP. White would pass as white to investigate lynchings and riots in the South. 2. European attitudes: When she decided to set sail to England. In Europe, Marian was given a sense of possibility as she could stay at any hotel unlike in the US. Anderson was able to tour all over Europe and become a hit like Josephine Baker did. She found her success in Europe because the prejudices were not as great in Europe against black artists.

Which of the following is not a characteristic of modernist art, as defined in lecture a. an interest in representing nature b. an interest in representing speed c. an interest in representing psychology d. an interest in representing the city

A

In the short story "The Fly," Mr. Woodifielf mentions that his wife and daughters ('the girls") have recently taken a trip. Where did they go, and why does this make his boos momentarily upset?

Mr. Woodifield's wife and daughters took a trip to Belgium. There they saw Mr. Woodifield's son's grave and also saw the boos's sons as well. The boss was struck by this news and did not seem to want to talk about his son and the grave.

In little Annie Rooney, Annie's gang gets into trouble and has to come up with $5. Why? What small crime had a member if her gang accidentally committed?

Annie's gang had hit a fruit sellers horse and made It run away.

Aggregate assessments of the New Deal, "Social Assistance" New Deal legislation put in place each of the following except: a. a national minimum wage b. national health insurance for the elderly c. federal programs of unemployment insurance d. ban on child labor

B

Each of the following performers became major stars as dancers and/or singers in American movie musicals in the 1930s and 40s except: a. Shirley Temple b. Clark Gable c. Fred Astaire d. Bill Robinson

B

In When Affirmation Action was White, Ira Katznelson makes 2 of the points below. Which of the following claims about aid to Black Americans during the Depression is NOT true? a. a higher proportion of blacks than whites worked as sharecroppers, and since sharecroppers earned almost no cash, and federal New Deal relief payments were based upon the prior year's earnings, sharecroppers received very little cash aid. b. Under pressure from southern senators, congress passed a law stating taht blacks would receive only 2/3 the benefits that whites received from the federal govt. c. The majority of federal aid was sent to state and local authorities who decided whom to give it to; local authorities in the south were white, and tended to give more more relief money to whites than blacks

B

Which of the following was not a factor behind the movie industry's decision to move from New Jersey to Hollywood? a. Better weather all year 'round b. a generous tax break from the governor of CA c. cheaper real estate/land and labor costs d. getting away from the litigious Edison Company

B

which of the following is the most consistent visual aspect of the journal blast? a. the gorgeous colorful image b. the bold and unconventional typography c. the medieval drawings of animals d. the gravestones that are drawn on every page e. the cursive signatures of each of the writers who contributed

B

In the excerpt from the novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, German comrades (who are also friends from high school) visiting their friend Kemmerich, who is now wounded and lying in a military hospital bed. Why is Muller so intent upon taking Kemmerich's soft leather boots away from the hospital?

Muller is intent on taking Kemmerich's soft leather boots because his were not going to get used. Muller's boots were destroyed and this was an opportunity to get some new ones, since Kemmerich would not be wearing them anymore.

Describe one specific attribute of murals that were painted as part of the federal work programs under FDR's New Deal.

Murals focused on the normal aspects of life. they depicted people in normal time and everyday life

Name two celebrities of the Roaring twenties and briefly explain how new technology made It possible for people to become celebrities.

Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey -New technology like the radio allowed celebrities to become famous because they were talked about. Magazines and radios allowed common people the ability to hear about these celebrities

Why was the actor Ben Kingsley a particularly suitable choice for the role of Gandhi?

Because he was born in the same area of India as Gandhi was.

Who was Bishop von Galen, and what did he denounce?

Bishop von Galen was a Catholic bishop that inspires the White Rose, Catholics didnt like Nazis, gives giving sermons against certain Nazi; Nazi T-4 (youthanizing nice), interference with religion life

What does Irene's husband Brian do for a living?

Brian is a doctor. He specifically works in the black hospital where It is limited in what he can do

All of the following were leisure activities and/or fads in the roaring twenties except one a. Mah jong (chinese board game) b. the coue self-help movement c. hula hoops d. flagpole sitting

C

Every statement below about the Hays Code is true except: a. The code was drafter by a Jesuit priest at the request of William Hays b. The code was voluntarily adopted by major picture producers c. The code was imposed upon major film producers by the US government d. The code was followed by most film producers from the mid-1930s until the '60s.

C

The original Social SecuritY plan for old-age pensions left out two groups of workers. Which two groups were left out of receiving Social Security checks in old age? a. farm workers and factory workers b. grocery clerks and factory workers c. farm workers and maids d. factory workers and teachers

C

We learn in Berlin Rising that ALL of the following are true statements about Weimar Berlin in the "Golden Twenties" (1920s) except one. which is false? a. there was a flourishing, dynamic, and experimental theater and music scene b. in the artsy, cabaret neighborhoods of Berlin, gay persons were generally accepted c. The SA and Nazis in general, never went near the cabaret neighborhood d. cocaine abuse was widespread in the nightclub scene

C

Which of the following is a false claim about the film Gandhi, as described by Dr. Moffett in class on Friday? a. It won numerous academy awards b. It took a long time to get the production of the film started c. It did not make money at the box office because of its serious subject. d. It was initially encouraged by Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who is depicted in the film.

C

Which of the following statements best sums one of FDR's messages in his campaign speech from 1932? Commonwealth club address a. the nation is in an unprecedented crisis and the US govt. should address this crisis by opening up new lands for settlement out West. b. The nation is in a terrible crisis and we address this crisis by taxing industrial tycoons in order to create massive jobs programs c. When the US was a nation of farmers, the govt. aided common folks by opening new lands out West; now that we are an industrialized nation, the federal govt. needs to ensure economic rights by regulating high finance. d. When the US was a nation of farmers, the govt. aided common folks by opening new lands out west; now that we are an industrialized nation, the federal govt. needs to assume management of all large banks and corporations

C

"The others disappeared; there she was alone with . And she felt that she had been given a present, wrapped up, and told to keep It, not to look at It- a diamond, something infinitely precious, wrapped up, which, as they walked (up and down, up and down), she uncovered, or the radiance burnt through, the revelation, the religious feeling!" Describe the significance of the this quotation to the novel.

Shows when Clarissa was in one of her happiest states. Clarissa was in love with Sally, and she was now married to Richard. The novel is speaking of a being in love with another women which was an aspect of modernist. It allows the readers to see who Clarissa is in a deeper way.

"Or there was the poets and thinkers. Suppose he had had that passion, and had gone to _______, a great doctor yet to her obscurely evil, without sex or lust, extremely polite to women, but capable of some indescribable outrage- forcing your soul, that was It- if this young man had gone to him, and_____ had impressed him, like that, with his power, might he not then have said, life is made intolerable; they make life intolerable, men like that?" Fill in the blank with the name of the character Clarissa is contemplating.

Sir Williams Bradshaw

Both Sophie and Hans shout out brief remarks to the judge in their (show) trial. Write down what one of them said in court:

Sophie: your terror will soon come, Hans:you may hang us today, but you'll be hanged tomorrow

"Closed cars" transformed social life for many young adults. According to Lewis, how did cars change young people's relationships?

Cars allowed young people to be private with their relationships and take them to the next level. Lewis said that a lot of kissing and sex took place in the car.

In the historical overview reading, you learned that the Great War was a "total war" in the sense that civilians played a major role. What was the major contribution that civilians in the major powers made to the war effort?

Civilians were contributing to the war by making weapons in factories

Early in the film Modern Times, the tramp is chosen to demonstrate a new automatic machine that... a. moves him around the factory b. performs his assembly line tasks c. puts his overalls on for him d. feeds him lunch

D

"Or there was the poets and thinkers. Suppose he had had that passion, and had gone to _______, a great doctor yet to her obscurely evil, without sex or lust, extremely polite to women, but capable of some indescribable outrage- forcing your soul, that was It- if this young man had gone to him, and_____ had impressed him, like that, with his power, might he not then have said, life is made intolerable; they make life intolerable, men like that?" Describe the significance of the this quotation to the novel.

Digs at the doctors of the time in England. Sir Williams Bradshaw was a well known doctor that everyone in England knew and followed, but Woolf seems to think the opposite. Clarissa can see why Septimus might have wanted to die because of what that doctor was going to make him do, isolation.

Hiram Evans serves as "imperial wizard" of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s. His philosophy appealed to many white Protestants in the South and the upper-Midwest in the US. For today, you read Evan's piece on "Americanism and the Klan." What, specifically, do you think Evans would have disliked about the film story Little Annie Rooney.

Evans would not have liked how diverse Annie's gang was. Evans believes that aliens could uphold American traditions. These aliens would have been apart of the group of children in Annie's gang.

The early years of Germany's postwar republic were marked by economic crisis. However, in 1924, the Dawes Plan brought some relief. As completely and clearly as you can, describe the Dawes Plan: what was It, how It worked, and its impact on Germany as well as the U.S.

The Dawes Plan was a plan of relief to Germany allowed by the League of Nations. The Dawes Plan included loans sent from the US to Germany. These loans helped to stimulate both economies as Germany could get people working and buying. The Germans then had money to buy US products.

What was one of the most horrifying and unusual symptoms of the 1918-1920 influenza pandemic?

The bleeding coming out of noses, mouths, and other places in the body. Some even turned black which was unusual.

What were the "bob haircut" and the "clothe" hat that became all the rage in the 1920s?

The bob was a short haircut that was around the ears and easy to deal with. The cloche was tight fit around the head.

Many Americans who were middle class or wealthy, or who worked on farms and in not in factories, grew suspicious of foreign laborers especially. What were foreign laborers suspected of, what were they called, and or/ what accusations were made about them?

Foreign laborers were suspected of being apart of the Red Scare or Bolskivics. People thought that they were working against the government and were spreading communism.

In the essay about the ambiguous legacy of Western imperial rule over Asian colonies, Theodore von Laue claims that some modern Western political ideals helped to undermine Western (European) political rule over colonies such as India. What modern Western political ideal(s) contradict Western practices of ruling Asian and African peoples?

Freedom. In the West people had freedom even Gandhi, but he did not when he was in India.

Who the Aryan peoples were and where they fit into the history of the Indian subcontinet (what peoples they migrated after, and what group they migrated before and what their main religion was).

From Turkey, Eastern Europe, Western Asia- took up Hinduism- going off in all directions- outnumbered the dravidians, took over Aryan sub continent

In the early 1930s, Joseph Goebbels was dispatched to Berlin to cultivate support for Nazism. Based upon what you read in Berlin Rising, describe Goebbels' tactics. How did he drum up support for Nazis?

Goebbel starts his own newspaper, fights would start and then newspaper would pin It on communists, propaganda: eliminate the truth, exaggerate

In Passing, where does Irene Redfield go to cool off on a hot day in Chicago?

Goes to a rooftop in a hotel in Chicago. There she was considered to be "passing" based on the side of town she was in.

In the 1940s when violent clashes erupt between the Hindu majority and the Muslim minority in some major cities, Gandhi is distraught and undergoes a fast. While he is fasting, a man comes to him and confesses to a horrible crime and demands that Gandhi "Eat!" The man tells Gandhi that he is now "living in hell." Gandhi tells the man that he "knows a way out of hell." What did the man do and what "way out of hell" does Gandhi suggest to the man?

The man had killed a muslim child. Gandhi told the man to find and raise a child with no mother and father that was Muslim. He must raise the child to be muslim and that would help him get out of hell.

A few days after his inauguration, FDR temporarily closed all US banks for a temporary "bank holiday." FDR then went on the radio and explained that solvent banks would re-open on Monday. What did the President ask Americans to do on Monday?

He asked them to go to the bank and deposit money

After the Depression hit, President Hoover, for most of his term in office, believed firmly that the Federal govt. should not create infrastructure jobs or put income directly into the hands of everyday Americans. What was Hoover's reasoning?

He believed that It would make people lazy and unwilling to work.

In The Warmth of Other Suns, why did young George Starling suddenly rush intro marrying his girlfriend Inez?

He does It to make his father mad.

In Cabaret, how does Brian Roberts earn money in Germany?

He earns money by translating books into English and teaching English

Soon after Gandhi returns in India after living in South Africa, he embarks on a train tour in India. Why? What reason does he give to his fellow Indian Congress leaders for taking this journey?

He takes a train tour so that he can see the real India as he felt foreign in his own country.

This reading states that the December 2020 pandemic relief bill was the second biggest in the US history. What was the most expensive relief spending bill in the U.S. history (thus far)?

The most expensive relief spending bill in the US history, was the virus relief package. The package was signed nine months (March) the biggest bill that has been signed. This virus bill passed the stimulus in response to the financial crisis in 2009 and the bill in December.

Towards the end of the novel, Irene and a friend see someone on the streets, an encounter that influences the chain of events at the end of the novel. Who do they see?

Irene sees her friend Clare's white husband

Describe the salt march that Gandhi engineered in 1930. What was It, what was its purpose, and what was its impact?

It was a march that Gandhi held where he walked into the Ocean and created salt. At that time creating salt was illegal and taxed by the British, but salt was something that in the climate of India was needed to survive. The purpose was to show unity of the people of India and say that It is their salt and not the British. It had a great impact as the British started to fear that they were losing power and India was uniting in a non-violent way.

Name one thing in The Awful Truth that Lucy does just to bother Jerry, and one thing that Jerry does just to bother Lucy.

Jerry does: make her dance with Dan at the restaurant. After one song, Jerry gives money to a waiter to give to the musician so that they will play the song again. Jerry knew that Lucy did not enjoy the dancing that she was doing with Dan, so to annoy her he made her do It more. Lucy: picking up Jerry's phone and answering It. When she had picked It up, the person on the line was Jerry's girlfriend- this annoyed Jerry

Who is speaking to whom in this next quote, and what is the situation? "We broke even. You don't owe me nothing. And I don't owe you nothing."

John who is the sharecropper on the plantation that George lives on is talking to Big George. The situation is that all of the expenses (debt) had been even with the sales from Big George's crop. This meant that Big George did not owe John anything else.

After the party has finished, what does Laura bring to the Scott family?

Laura brings left over sandwiches and other food from the party to the Scott family

What does Laura see at the end of "the Garden Party" that fills her with wonder?

Laura sees the body of the man Scott that dies and It fills her with wonder.

In the immediate wake of the first World War, President Woodrow Wilson, one of the leaders at the postwar treaty-making conference, advocated for the US to join a new organization that he hoped would better ensure world peace. What was the name of that organization?

League of Nations

In the wake of the First Wold War, citizens in Europe and America felt a variety of complex emotions. Based on your reading of the newspaper accounts of the Peace Day celebrations, the Cenotaph poems, the story "The Fly" and the excerpt from All Quiet on the Western Front, identify and briefly discuss three different attitudes to the war you perceive people expressing in these texts. Why are people feeling in the way that they feel?

Many different attitudes were brought up from these works. One attitude is a feeling of trying not to remember. This was shown in "The Fly" as the boss was not trying to remember the death of his son in anyway. -Another attitude was sadness for those that had lost their lives while fighting. In one if the Cenotaph poems It brought up the blood that was shed while fighting and the fact that these boys would never grow old -Lastly, another attitude was gratitude or gratefulness. This was seen in the newspaper as people were extremely happy that people came together on the day of the celebration. Different countries representatives came and everyone was excited and grateful that they were there.

immediately following the end of the Great War (Nov 1918), the American economy experienced a sharp downturn for over a year. As army demobilized( men came home looking for jobs), and factories struggled to transition from weapon-making to consumer-product making, and the shortage of good caused acute inflation and workers' wages did not keep with inflation, what action did many workers take?

Many workers went on strike and were demanding better hours and the creation of unions.

As Dr. Mulderry explained in lecture on Friday, before the war most Europeans celebrated "progress" in their nations: at the same time, there were some widespread cultural anxieties that had to do with industrialization. Name and describe one of the prewar dominant anxieties and what It had to do with industrialization.

One worry was that men were unfit for the war. Mandy had been working in offices before the war, so people were worried that they were not built to go fight. People believed that they were weak and that would hurt them in the end

One of the characteristics of modernist art is that It is very frequently avant-garde. Define the term "avant-garde" and describe It by choose one work you read or saw this week and discuss why It might be considered avant-garde.

Push the boundaries

Not to be confused with the Red Scare of 1919-1920, was the Red Summer of 1919. Describe the Red Summer

Red summer was a summer filled with many attack on African Americans. A lot of incidents happened in Chicago where many African Americans were killed. one incident that happened was when a group of young African Americans were in a lake. The lake was divided/segregated. One of the boys went on the white side. This led to the other 2 swimming away and the boy on the white side drowning, as whites were throwing stones at them.

"The others disappeared; there she was alone with . And she felt that she had been given a present, wrapped up, and told to keep It, not to look at It- a diamond, something infinitely precious, wrapped up, which, as they walked (up and down, up and down), she uncovered, or the radiance burnt through, the revelation, the religious feeling!" Fill in the blank with the name of the character Clarissa is remembering in the past.

Sally Seton

"when peace came he was in Milan, billeted in the house of an innkeeper with a courtyard, flowers in tubs, little tables in the open, daughters making hats, and to Lucrezia, the younger daughter, he became engaged one evening when the panic was on him- that he could not feel" who is the "he" of the passage

Septimus

Describe Marian Anderson's most significant set-back when she was an adult and in NYC; briefly describe how she handled that set-back in the short term and how she ultimately overcame It.

Set-back: Marian Anderson had in NYC was in 1924. Before this, Anderson was packing places in Harlem and her first record came out, but she wanted more. She wanted to perform in New York City, and thus show did not go as planned. She expected the place to be packed but It was not. Critics in the news started to critique her technique, and how her mistakes were being brought up overcome: when she came back to the US after being abroad. Her face was all over the New York Times and she was "the voice of the century". She as a performer was overcoming her set-back, but there was still struggles based on the color of her skin

During her ordeal portrayed in the film, how does Sophie find moments of consolation and/or peace?

She finds peace when looking out at the sky through the cell window. She is constantly looking out the window and at the sunny sky. Before she was killed, she told Han's that the "sun was still shining."

As portrayed in the film Gandhi, why does Gandhi's wife "Ba" refuse to claim the latrines at the ashram in South Africa?

She refuses to clean the latrines in South Africa because It was a job that the "untouchables" did.

What was Sophie's cell mate, Else, in prison for?

She was a communist

What was the BDM? (scholl reading)

The female Hitler group that Sophie was apart of

At the very end of the Awful Truth, how does the film-maker signal to the audience that Jerry and Lucy got together that evening (without breaking any of the rules of the Hollywood Code)?

The film-makers had figures of Jerry and Lucy in a clock and at the end the figures go on the same side of the clock. At first, the figures were separated by the sides, but Jerry's figure followed lucy and then the flap closed.

Helen and her siblings occasionally interacted with-- or observe-- women at a house of ill repute across the street. What drama(s) unfold at that house?

The house was called the "house of sin" and was a prostition house. One day they saw an Irish Liverpool women yelling at the house and then a middle aged lady comes out of the house. The middle aged women stabs the Irish lady. Then a man comes how is the Irish lady's husband. He grabs her, beaters her and drags her to their house.

In his short biographical piece, W.E.B. DuBois describes an incident from his childhood when he first realized that there was a "veil" dividing him from his classmates in his small school in Massachusetts. Briefly, what incident prompted him to see and feel "the veil"?

The incident that prompted DuBois to see and feel "the veil" was when he was trying to give a girl a card. The girl then refused the card, and DuBois noticed this happened because he was black and the girl was white.

In the Awful Truth, Lucy and Jerry are appealing in front of a judge near the beginning of the film to settle and issue pertaining to their divorce. What issue are they settling and how is It settled?

The issue is about the dog. Both parties said that the dog was theirs, so the judge let the dog decide. The dog was put in the middle of Jerry and Lucy. Lucy had a dog toy in her sleeve so the dog went to her and the judge declared that It was hers.

The makers of this documentary invite viewers to compare the formal dedication of the Lincoln Memorial in 1922 to the gathering in front of the Lincoln Memorial on Easter Sunday, 1939. Please share your reflection on the comparison between these two events; that is, what are your main "take aways" from those parts of the film?

The main take way was the difference in meaning that both events had. The Lincoln memorial in 1922, was a time of major segregation as the blacks that were invited were taken to the back in the weeds. This moment was looked as a time that was changing history as the country was against what Lincoln fought for. The gathering on Easter Sunday was also a moment of change in history as over 75,000 people came to see Marian Anderson perform. Within that groups of 75,000 were public figures and was a diverse crowd of people. In 1922 I see It as tearing down of the history and more segregation, but 1939 was a moment of the US coming together.

Gandhi began to develop his philosophy and strategies of nonviolent civil disobedience while he was an attorney in South Africa, where he led a movement against the "pass laws." What were the pass laws--- whom did they harm and how?

The pass laws was a card that Indians had to present and carry so they would be able to do things. They specifically harmed the Indians as they were almost treated as criminals by having them. After Gandhi, led a movement, the provisions got worse. They basically said that women were whores and men were bastards.

In lecture, we watched a short clip from the film intolerance. Identify one aspect of the film that anticipates or is similar to the big budget blockbusters Hollywood produces today.

The props that were used and the amount of people that were in the movie

In the summer of 1937, Hans and his sister Inge went to Munch to see the premier exhibit of the "house of german art," i.e., art of which the Nazis approved. To complement this exhibit, Propaganda Minister Goebbels mounted a second exhibit in a gallery a few blocks away. Describe the second exhibit.

The second exhibit was artwork that had been banned and was considered "degenerate". It was full of modernist and non-traditional art. More people seemed to like the second exhibit more than the first one, and so did Hans.

Name one difference between the unemployment levels in the US in the 1920s and unemployment levels in the UK in the 1920s

The unemployment levels in the UK in the 1920s was higher than the US in the 1920s. The unemployment levels in the UK were higher after the first world war than in the US.

The Great Migration of African-Americans out of the South began in 1914/1915. What drew African-Americans to northern and western cities at this particular time?

They were drawn because of the factory jobs that were in the North and West.

The novel is an exploration of the phenomenon of "passing": African-Americans with light skin who choose to pass as being white. Analyze the benefits and costs of passing according to the novel. What are the advantages to what Clare does, and what is the psychological damage she suffers in doing so?

advantages: 1. can get away from the African American life. She does not have to deal with heat and attacks from whites. 2. gets to marry someone with money and live a good life. She gets to enjoy the perks of being white during that time. costs: 1. lying to herself and others about who she really is. She is always having to put on a show for those around her. 2. Clare is extremely lonely as she does not get to be with people she really wanted to be around. dangers: once you pass one cant go back.

What was a "whisper joke"?

anti-hitler joke

Most economists agree that the most trenchant cause of the Great Depression was not the stock market crash of 1929. Rather, the main cause of the Depression was a credit crisis, i.e., the lack of loan money. Describe what led to the credit crisis.

caused by a large number of banks failing

In Modern Times, the Tramp and his orphan girlfriend get to roller skate and try out luxury furniture when the tramp gets a job in a_____.

department store

In Modern Times, the Tramp is arrested by police when he is caught accidentally carrying a _______ which attracts labor activists who march and demonstrate behind him

flag

The conversations that take place in "Kew Gardens" are linked by periodic descriptions of what animal moving through the garden?

linked to a snail moving through the garden

In the film Cabaret, Sally Bowles exhibits a complex character and personality. Write a paragraph is which you assess what you see as her main personality strengths, her main weaknesses, and (in your view) the causes of her weaknesses.

main personality strengths: are that she is outgoing. she is always talking to someone new or trying to explore. -weakness: she is insecure, deep down she is not happy with herself and one can see that most of It seems to be an act. With Brian she would show her true self more and one could see how insecure she really was. -cause: could be from her father that she does not really talk too or the fact that she has not grown in the show business.

Dr. Moffett describes the novel Mrs. Dalloway as having a "spatially mobil narrator", describe what this means in your own words

means that the narrator is going in and out of different characters. They are inhabiting different characters that talk about the past and present.

How does Brian know that Sally has had an abortion before she tells him?

she sold her fur coat

Drawing upon the historical overview reading about the Great War, name one cause of the Great War.

the assassination of the duke of austria

for a time, when Hans Scholl was a teenager, he and his father Robert conflicted sharply over:

they conflicted over Hans joining the Hitler youth

Social Security Act

what It did: created federally managed old age pension system, disability insurance, and unemployment insurance

Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)

what It did: employed young unmarried men that were well bodied to work in forests and help build things

"when peace came he was in Milan, billeted in the house of an innkeeper with a courtyard, flowers in tubs, little tables in the open, daughters making hats, and to Lucrezia, the younger daughter, he became engaged one evening when the panic was on him- that he could not feel" Describe the significance of this quotation to the novel.

when Septimus met his wife in Milan right after the war. This is when the shell shock signs started to show. He could not feel which was something that he experienced throughout the novel as a sign of his symptoms of shellshock.


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