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German 059
Fall
Semester 2020
Professor David Pike dpike@email.unc.edu Office hours: By appointment Moscow 1937: Dictatorships
and their Defenders
This course offers a novel
approach to the study of recurrent problems of enormous consequence: (1) the
origins and emergence of dictatorships that engage in grievous practices of
repression and mass murder, (2) in what ways these regimes are understood, and
by whom, as they develop and "mature" - philosophically,
ideologically, historically; (3) and how such regimes tend often to be
enveloped in justifications by "outside observers" that help keep
them in existence. The Soviet Union, particularly during the thirties and the
blood purges, serves as the axis. However, a main objective is to use this
particular "case study" - to branch off into different directions
of student inquiry. We will attempt to establish prevalent historical opinion
about these phenomena in order to contrast -
favorably and unfavorable - contemporary treatments of the Soviet Union
during these horrible years of bloodshed.
Aside from regular class
attendance* and participation in discussions, each student in the classwill be asked to write two papers in
the course of the semester. The first, a 6 page
paper, is due shortly after spring break; the final paper, no less than 10
pages, is due at the time of our regularly scheduled final exam, which
is CLEARLY set. Please consult this university site and make your own note of
when the final exam for this class is scheduled:
Additionally, each of you is expected to keep his or her own precise record of days and dates missed, and for each day missed, please copy the text of the email you sent me into your own list.
George Buechner: Danton's
Death
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