8.25.2011

The Economy of the Weimar Republic




People use the term “Weimar Republic” to refer to a period in German history between 1919 and 1933 when the government was a democratic republic governed by a constitution that was laid out in the German city of Weimar. Technically, the Weimar Constitution lasted until 1945, when the German government was formally dissolved in the wake of the Second World War, but most people date the end of the Weimar Republic to 1933, when Adolf Hitler took control and the constitution became effectively meaningless under his Third Reich. 





Under the Weimar Constitution, Germany was divided into 19 states. All citizens had the right to vote, electing members of the Reichstag or German Parliament along with the President. The President in turn appointed a chancellor and an assortment of cabinet members. As many historians have noted, on paper, the Weimar Constitution was a brilliant document, and Germany under the Weimar Republic was a true democracy. 

However, even from the start, the Weimar Republic was deeply troubled. When the constitution was first established, many Germans were highly suspicious of the new government, and extremists on the left and right rejected the authority of the Weimar Republic, undermining its effectiveness. While the government was theoretically a coalition comprised of numerous political parties, it was beset on all sides, making it difficult to assert its authority. 

In addition to being in political trouble from the beginning, the Weimar Republic also faced serious financial challenges. Inflation in Germany skyrocketed in the 1920s, and at one point, six million Germans were unemployed. Citizens grew increasingly restless and angry, and Adolf Hitler took advantage of this once he was sworn in as Chancellor on 30 January 1933. Less than a month later, the Reichstag building was gutted by a fire of mysterious origin, and Hitler effectively took control, suppressing opposition political parties under the guide of public safety and turning the Weimar Republic into a dictatorship. 

After WWI, the economic impact of the Treaty of Versailles was crushing. Germany lost 13% of their territory, 10% of her population, 15% of arable land, 75% of iron and 68% of zinc ore, 26% of her coal resources, the entire Alsatian potash and textile industries, and the communications system built around Alsace-Lorraine and Upper Silesia. Huge amounts of ships and shipping facilities and of railway rolling-stock were delivered to the Allies.


All this was more important than the reparations payments imposed by the treaty, although the latter attracted greater attention. This was because of the link made in the treaty between reparations and the so-called ''war-guilt'' clause. Article 231 bothered the Germans more than any other. The amount of reparations fixed in 1921 was estimated by J. M. Keynes to exceed by three times Germany's ability to pay. In order to pay this, they borrowed money from the United States of America, which at the time had the best economy and was giving out many loans. 

The government had a huge lack of organization and if affected the country economically, causing hyperinflation and money shortages. The prices were rising, but people didn’t have the money to spend on necessities. 

As a result of hyperinflation, there was news accounts of individuals suffering from a compulsion called zero stroke, a condition where the person has a "desire to write endless rows of (zeros) and engage in computations more involved than the most difficult problems in logarithms." 

Although the inflation ended with the introduction of the Rentenmark and the Weimar Republic continued for a decade afterwards, hyperinflation is widely believed to have contributed to the Nazi takeover of Germany and Adolf Hitler's rise to power. Adolf Hitler himself in his book, Mein Kampf, makes many references to the German debt and the negative consequences that brought about the inevitability of "National Socialism". The inflation also raised doubts about the competence of liberal institutions, especially amongst a middle class who had held cash savings and bonds. It also produced resentment of bankers and speculators, whom the government and press blamed for the inflation. Many of them were Jews, and some Germans called the hyperinflated Weimar banknotes Jew Confetti


Here is a link to a time line of the Weimer Period:
http://dmorgan.web.wesleyan.edu/materials/weimar.htm

Entertainment of the 1920's

by: Alejandra Cornejo

The entertainment of the 20’s was different in many ways that what we have today. This years, were called the “Jazz Age”, because of this type of music and the dance emerged. With the jazz age, many new cultural movements took place in different countries.  During the 20’s many people changed the music industry and the way people look at it.

As we may think, this new movement, create a type of competition with classical music, but suddenly it gained more and more popularity.

With jazz, new dances as Charleston, which was developed by the African American, emerged and became more popular than older dances.

One of the great figures of this times was Louis Armstrong, who had changed music a lot, and also had make it better in many ways. His recording “West end blues” was the most famous. Duke Ellington changed music too; he is now considered one of the best American composers.

But apart from music, many other things happened. As the creation of famous cartoon as Betty Boop, Mickey Mouse and Winnie the Pooh.

And also the first talking movie was produced by Warner Brothers, which was called “The Jazz Singer”. This movie talks about the son of a singer who moves to Los Angeles seeking for fame and fortune a popular musician. With the help of an actress he met, he reaches fame on Broadway.







8.23.2011

Ideologies: Nazism

by: Alejandra Cornejo

Nazism is consider one of the many fascist movements that develop and took political powers after World War I. Nazis promoted totalitarian and nationalists regimes which were founded under militarism, racism and political intolerance, all this led countries to a second World War.

Nazism Characteristics:
- Totalitarian regime: rights and individual freedom were abolished. Now, the companies and the working syndicates passed to be property of the state. All the activities of the citizens were monitored and coordinated by the police, at the same time that any opposition was oppressed.

- Militarization of the country: In Germany, the major part of the country was happy for this militarization because in one way, the older man participated on World War I, and the younger grew up with a deep feeling of revenge towards the ones who humiliated them after losing the war.

- Racism: was held that the Aryan or Indo-European race was the only top race for coming from the Greeks, Romans and Germans and that it was of total urgency to clean it of any not Aryan blood, especially of that of the Jews.

- Imperialism: Forgetting everything agreed in the Agreement of Versailles, the Nazis ordered to give arms to the population, the militar service was established as obligatory
, they annexed to the German territory the whole basin of the Ruhr (that had been yielded to the control of France) and the national territories of Austria and Czechoslovakia. 



This movement grew really quickly, because the largely to the utilization of publicity to reach the dream of a recovered, free land of the limitations imposed by the Agreement of Versailles it grew also for the fear of the communism and the social tensions originated by the economic depression and the unemployment.