Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
UNIT 12: BECOMING A SUPERPOWER, 1937-1963 Chapter 24: The World at War, 1937-1945 The Road to War (24A) 1. fascism I. The Rise of Fascism A. Japan and Italy 2. Benito Mussolini B. Hitler’s Germany 3. National Socialist (Nazi) Party 4. Adolf Hitler 5. Rome-Berlin Axis II. War Approaches 6. Neutrality Act of 1935 7. Charles Lindbergh A. The Popular Front B. The Failure of Appeasement 8. Munich Conference C. Isolationism and Internationalism 9. Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies 10. America First Committee 11. Four Freedoms 12. Lend-Lease Act 13. Winston Churchill 14. Atlantic Charter III. The Attack on Pearl Harbor 15. Hideki Tojo 16. Pearl Harbor Organizing for Victory (24B) 17. War Powers Act I. Financing the War 18. Revenue Act II. Mobilizing the American Fighting Force 19. code talkers III. Workers and the War Effort A. Rosie the Riveter B. Wartime Civil Rights 20. Executive Order 8802 21. Bracero Program C. Organized Labor IV. Politics in Wartime 22. Servicemen’s Readjustment Act (GI Bill) (1944) 23. Harry S Truman Life on the Home Front (24C) I. “For the Duration” 24. victory gardens 25. Office of War Information II. Migration and the Wartime Economy A. Racial Conflict 26. zoot suits B. Gay and Lesbian Communities III. Japanese Removal 27. Executive Order 9066 28. Gordon Hirabayashi Fighting and Winning the War (24D) I. Wartime Aims and Tensions II. The War in Europe 29. George Patton A. D-Day 30. Invasion of Normandy 31. Dwight Eisenhower B. The Holocaust III. The War in the Pacific 32. Bataan Death March 33. Battle of Midway 34. Douglas MacArthur 35. Chester Nimitz IV. The Atomic Bomb and the End of the War 36. Manhattan Project 37. George Marshall V. The Toll of the War CRASH COURSE VIDEOS World War II Part 1 World War II Part 2 The Cold War The Cold War in Asia UNIT 12: BECOMING A SUPERPOWER, 1937-1963 Chapter 25: Cold War America, 1945-1963 Containment and a Divided Global Order (25A) I. Origins of the Cold War 38. Joseph Stalin A. Yalta 39. Yalta Conference 40. United Nations B. Potsdam 41. Potsdam Conference II. The Containment Strategy 42. George Kennan 43. containment A. Toward an Uneasy Peace 44. Truman Doctrine 45. Marshall Plan B. East and West in the New Europe 46. Berlin Airlift 47. collective security 48. North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) 49. Warsaw Pact C. NSC-68 50. NSC-68 51. Hydrogen bomb (1952) III. Containment in Asia A. Civil War in China B. The Korean War C. The Munich Analogy Cold War Liberalism (25B) I. Truman and the End of Reform A. The 1948 Election 52. Cold War liberalism 53. Taft-Hartley Act B. The Fair Deal 54. Fair Deal II. Red Scare: The Hunt for Communists A. Loyalty-Security Program 55. Loyalty-Secutiry Program B. HUAC 56. House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) 57. Venona Transcripts C. McCarthyism 58. Joseph McCarthy III. The Politics of Cold War Liberalism A. America Under Eisenhower 59. Nikita Khrushchev 60. “New Look” 61. massive retaliation Containment in the Postcolonial World (25C) I. The Cold War and Colonial Independence A. Vietnam 62. domino theory B. The Middle East 63. Suez Crisis 64. Eisenhower Doctrine 65. Israel II. John F. Kennedy and the Cold War 66. John F. Kennedy A. The Election of 1960 and the New Frontier B. Crises in Cuba and Berlin 67. Fidel Castro 68. Bay of Pigs 69. Cuban Missile Crisis C. Kennedy and the World 70. Peace Corps III. Making a Commitment in Vietnam 71. Ho Chi Minh