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Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective : 1. To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2. To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was a time of social change in Germany. 3. To understand how Germans conceptualized the causes and consequences of the social changes. Schedule : 1. Weimar Discussion! Homework: 1. Read Excerpts from Mein Kampf Due: L20 (Mon 4/1) 2. Continue to work on pre-writing (1&2): Rolling Deadline 3. NEW DATES: Unit Test: Thurs 4/11 Last Day to Turn in Working Paper: Fri 4/12 Final Paper: Mon 4/29

Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

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Page 1: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic

AgendaObjective:1. To understand life in

the Weimar Republic.2. To understand how life

in the Weimar Republic was a time of social change in Germany.

3. To understand how Germans conceptualized the causes and consequences of the social changes.

Schedule: 1. Weimar Discussion!

Homework:1. Read Excerpts from

Mein Kampf Due: L20 (Mon 4/1)

2. Continue to work on pre-writing (1&2): Rolling Deadline

3. NEW DATES:• Unit Test: Thurs 4/11• Last Day to Turn in

Working Paper: Fri 4/12

• Final Paper: Mon 4/29

Page 2: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Our Focus/Goal for the Next Two Days

• What was life like in the Weimar Republic (in our six dimensions)?

• Where do we see social change in each of these dimensions?

• Who was most likely to be effected by these changes?• What did some Germans view as the cause of these

changes?• What did some Germans view as the consequences of

these changes?• Thesis about Weimar? (How would we describe it and

how people felt about it?)

Page 3: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

The Weimar Republic • The new government

created out of the German Revolution of 1918, was the Weimar Republic.

• August 1919-1933• Democracy

(Parliamentary)• Led by members of the

Social Democrats, Catholics, and Democratic parties.

• First democracy in Germany

Page 4: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

The Weimar Republic • Democracy was new to Germany.• Germany had been ruled by an emperor and was semi-

autocratic.– This system had virtually no democratic elements thus

the introduction of democratic ideals (universal suffrage, political parties) was a radical change for Germany.

• Emerges in the shadow of Germany’s defeat in World War One.• Germany embarks on its experiment in democracy at an unfavorable movement: a moment when the political and social system was already cracking…

Page 5: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Politics in the Weimar Government

• Structure of the Government – How is the government built

according to the Constitution– Strengths?– Weaknesses?

• What are the challenges that the government faces towards its legitimacy?

Page 6: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Politics & Economics

• At the same time Germany is trying to establish itself as a new democracy, it is also facing a major economic crisis.

Page 7: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Hyperinflation in Weimar Germany

• To understand the effects of hyperinflation, we need to some math.

• Consider the following:– Assume that in July 1922 a stove cost 100

German marks.– By November 1923 that stove cost 726,000,000,000 marks.– How is this possible?

Page 8: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Rate of Hyperinflation in Weimar Germany

• Take out a calculator…

• Monthly rate of hyperinflation (Divide by 15) = • Daily Rate of Hyperinflation (Divide by 30) = • Hourly Rate of Hyperinflation (Divide by 24) = • Rate of Hyperinflation per Minute (Divide by 60) =

• With this rate of hyperinflation what happens to wages?• With this rate of hyperinflation what happens to the

price of goods?• What is everyday life like under this sort of inflation?

Page 9: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was
Page 10: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was
Page 11: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was
Page 12: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

A million mark note being used as notepaper

Page 13: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Economics in Weimar Germany

• Who lost the most from hyperinflation?• Did anyone gain from hyperinflation?• How does the hyperinflation crisis invert the

social and economic structure in Germany?• During this time, how did Germans envision

their future? The future of the nation?• How did the hyperinflation crisis make some

Germans view the past?

Page 14: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Modernization, Industrialization, and Urbanization in Weimar

Germany• How was Germany industrializing

after World War One?• How was Germany urbanizing after

World War One?• What does it mean to say Germany

was modernizing?• How was Germany at a cross-roads

during the Weimar era?

Page 15: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Sex, Gender, and Demographics in Germany• What demographic shifts did Germany

experience in the Weimar Era?• What is the concept of volkstod?• Who/What did the public tend to

blame for these demographic shifts?• How did some Germans want to see

gender roles restructured to combat these demographic trends?

Page 16: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was
Page 17: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was
Page 18: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was
Page 19: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was
Page 20: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Arts & Culture in Weimar Germany

• What were German arts and culture like in the Weimar Era?

• What were the fears around Americanization?

• What were the fears around mass culture?• What were the fears around rationalization?• Who did some Germans blame for these

cultural shifts?

Page 21: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Foreign Sentiment & Anti-Semitism in Weimar Germany

• How was foreign sentiment linked to the Treaty of Versailles?

• What was the view of Jews in the Weimar Republic?

Page 22: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

• The “Dagger-stab-in-the-back Legend”: Austrian caricature of a Jew stabbing the German Army in the back with a dagger. (1919)

Page 23: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

• “Germans, consider this!”: A German cartoon of the dagger-stabbing-in-the-back of the German Army by the politicians Phillipp Scheidemann (Social Democratic Party), who proclaimed the Weimar Republic, and was the second Chancellor; and the anti-war militant Matthias Erzberger (Centre Party), who signed the Armistice with the Allies. Note the caricatured Jews in the background.

Page 24: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Putting it all Together• What was life like in the Weimar Republic (in our six

dimensions)?• Go back and look at all of the graphs in the reading. What

do you notice?• Where do we see social change in each of these

dimensions?• Who was most likely to be effected by these changes?• What did some Germans view as the cause of these

changes?• What did some Germans view as the consequences of

these changes?• Thesis about Weimar? (How would we describe it and how

people felt about it?)

Page 25: Lesson 18 & 19: The Weimar Republic Agenda Objective: 1.To understand life in the Weimar Republic. 2.To understand how life in the Weimar Republic was

Crisis of Modernity• Modernity is simply the sense or the idea that the

present is discontinuous with the past, that through a process of social and cultural change life in the present is fundamentally different from life in the past. – This sense or idea as a world view contrasts with tradition,

which is simply the sense that the present is continuous with the past, that the present in some way repeats the forms, behavior, and events of the past.

• The “crisis of modernity” is the sense that modernity is a problem, the traditional ways of life have been replaced with uncontrollable change and unmanageable alternatives. The crisis itself is merely the sense that the present is a transitional point not focused on a clear goal in the future but simply changing through forces outside our control.