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
NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION NOVEMBER 2013 HISTORY: PAPER I Time: 3 hours 150 marks PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY 1. This question paper consists of 8 pages and a Source Material Booklet of 4 pages (i – iv). Please check that your question paper is complete. Remove the Source Material Booklet from the middle of the question paper. 2. Read the questions carefully. 3. All questions must be answered. This paper consists of: Section A, which includes: • Visual Analysis • Textual Analysis • Media Analysis AND Section B, which includes: Source-based questions using the Source Material Booklet AND Section C, which includes: A source-based essay using the Source Material Booklet 4. Number your answers exactly as the questions are numbered. 5. Leave a line open between your answers. 6. It is in your own interest to write legibly. Work in an orderly way and present your answers as neatly as possible. 7. Candidates must pay attention to the mark allocation. Unless otherwise indicated two marks are awarded for a valid point. This means that a question carrying 4 marks requires two points. 8. Use the sources provided to formulate your answer unless specifically instructed to use your knowledge. IEB Copyright © 2013 PLEASE TURN OVER NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I SECTION A IN-DEPTH INDIVIDUAL SOURCE ANALYSIS QUESTION 1 VISUAL ANALYSIS Page 2 of 8 This cartoon entitled 'Gunpowder Plot' appeared in the British publication Punch on 2 November 1955. The cartoon features President Nasser of Egypt (bottom right) and the leaders of Syria and Iraq being supplied with weapons by the USSR which is represented as the shopkeeper. [<http://punch.photoshelter.com/image/I0000xlZHcCiqizU> Accessed 20 July 2012] IEB Copyright © 2013 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I 1.1 Page 3 of 8 Refer to ONE piece of evidence in the cartoon that identifies the shopkeeper as the USSR. (2) 1.2 What is the message that the cartoonist intended to convey in this cartoon? (2) 1.3 The Gunpowder Plot was an unsuccessful plan led by Guy Fawkes to blow up the British parliament in 1605. Today children in Britain and other parts of the world commemorate the event by setting off fireworks. 1.4 1.5 Using this information explain how the title of the cartoon ('Gunpowder Plot') provides further evidence of the cartoonist's intention. Your answer should contain TWO comprehensive points. (4) By referring to TWO visual clues discuss how the cartoonist has used bias to achieve this intention. (6) Use your knowledge to place this cartoon in historical context by briefly explaining the involvement of both the USA and the USSR in the Middle East after Nasser became leader of Egypt in 1954. Your answer should include THREE comprehensive points. IEB Copyright © 2013 (6) [20] PLEASE TURN OVER NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I QUESTION 2 Page 4 of 8 TEXTUAL ANALYSIS This is an extract from a speech that was delivered at the base of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, on 12 June 1987 by President Ronald Reagan of the United States to the people of West Berlin. In the 1950s, Khrushchev predicted: 'We will bury you.' But in the West today, we see a free world that has achieved a level of prosperity and well-being unprecedented* in all human history. In the Communist world, we see failure, technological backwardness, declining standards of health, even want of the most basic kind – too little food. Even today, the Soviet Union still cannot feed itself. After these four decades, then, there stands before the entire world one great and inescapable conclusion: Freedom leads to prosperity. Freedom replaces the ancient hatreds among the nations with comity* and peace. Freedom is the victor. And now the Soviets themselves may, in a limited way, be coming to understand the importance of freedom. We hear much from Moscow about a new policy of reform and openness. Some political prisoners have been released. Certain foreign news broadcasts are no longer being jammed*. Some economic enterprises have been permitted to operate with greater freedom from state control. Are these the beginnings of profound changes in the Soviet state? Or are they token gestures, intended to raise false hopes in the West, or to strengthen the Soviet system without changing it? We welcome change and openness; for we believe that freedom and security go together, that the advance of human liberty can only strengthen the cause of world peace. There is one sign the Soviets can make that would be unmistakable, that would advance dramatically the cause of freedom and peace. General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalisation*: Come here to this gate! Mr Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr Gorbachev, tear down this wall! [<http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/historicdocuments/a/teardownwall.htm> Accessed 21 July 2012] * unprecedented = has not happened before * comity = courtesy and friendship * jammed = blocked * liberalisation = reform 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 According to Reagan, why was the Communist world considered to be a failure? Write down THREE reasons. (6) Use your knowledge to write down the terms given to the 'new policy of reform and openness' that were introduced by Gorbachev. Write down TWO terms. (4) What, according to Reagan, would be the one sign that Gorbachev could make to prove that his new policy was not a 'token gesture'? (2) Write down one propaganda technique that has been used by Reagan in this speech. Support your answer with ONE quote from the source. (4) This speech is often referred to as one of history's iconic* speeches. Use your knowledge of the historical context of this speech to explain why. Your answer should include TWO comprehensive points. * iconic = famous and symbolic IEB Copyright © 2013 (4) [20] Page 5 of 8 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I QUESTION 3 MEDIA ANALYSIS – GLOBALISATION The original source was published in 2004 and appeared on the Solidarity Philippines Australia Network <website www.cpcabrisbane.org>. 2004 Is the 60th Birthday of the World Bank and IMF … but … Send an Unhappy Birthday Card to the IMF and the World Bank On Your 60th Birthday We Call on You to Cancel 100% of the Debts of Impoverished* Countries Without Harmful Conditions! We want to bring attention to the devastating legacy that unjust IMF/ World Bank policies and ever-growing debt have had on countries of the Global South. We will also make it clear that the debt crisis has not been resolved! While the World Bank and IMF continue to drag their feet with their limited and conditional debt relief program, thousands continue to die needlessly from preventable diseases and HIV/AIDS. [Adapted from <http://cpcabrisbane.org/V18n1/IMF_WB> Accessed 20 July 2012] * impoverished = poor IEB Copyright © 2013 PLEASE TURN OVER NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I Page 6 of 8 3.1 What is the intention of this source? (2) 3.2 What is the 'debt' referred to in this source? Use your knowledge to explain briefly how this 'debt' came into being. (6) Provide TWO quotes of bias from the source that are evidence of its disapproval of the IMF and World Bank. (4) 3.3 3.4 3.5 Use your knowledge to explain the role of the following financial institutions in the world economy: 3.4.1 World Bank (2) 3.4.2 IMF (2) Use your knowledge to explain whether the claim that the World Bank and IMF are responsible for the deaths of thousands from preventable diseases and HIV/AIDS is valid. (4) [20] 60 marks IEB Copyright © 2013 Page 7 of 8 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I SECTION B SOURCE-BASED QUESTIONS Study the sources contained in the Source Booklet and then answer the following questions: Refer to Sources A and B 1.1 Why did traditional Western historians blame the USSR for starting the Cold War? (2) 1.2 How does the Post-Revisionist view of the Cold War differ from the Traditional view? Your answer should refer to both views. (4) Use Source A to identify which view of the origins of the Cold War the writer of Source B supports. Explain your decision. (4) 1.3 Refer to Source C 1.4 1.5 Use your knowledge to explain what the following historical terms are. (Your answer should also focus on the intention behind each of these policies.) 1.4.1 Truman Doctrine (3) 1.4.2 Marshall Plan (3) How did Gorbachev's new approach towards the Eastern European communist states change Soviet views of the origins of the Cold War? Your answer should focus on the link between Gorbachev's new approach and the change from the traditional Soviet historiography. Your answer should include TWO comprehensive points. (6) Refer to Source D 1.6 Write down TWO reasons that Simon Willis gives for hating the Communists. (4) 1.7 Evaluate the reliability of Source D for a historian studying the impact of the Cold War on the world in the 1950s. (6) Refer to Sources E and F 1.8 Both of these cartoons are critical of the role played by the respective superpowers in the Cold War. By referring to ONE visual clue in EACH of the cartoons explain how the cartoonists have portrayed the superpowers in a similar way. (6) Refer to Sources G and H 1.9 Use your knowledge to explain what Churchill meant by an 'iron curtain'. (2) 1.10 Was Stalin correct to interpret Churchill's speech as being critical of the USSR? Provide TWO quotes from Source G to support your answer. (6) Write down TWO reasons that Stalin gives for the USSR wanting to see governments loyal to the USSR being established in Eastern Europe. (4) 1.11 50 marks IEB Copyright © 2013 PLEASE TURN OVER NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I SECTION C Page 8 of 8 SOURCE-BASED ESSAY Use Sources A to H in the Source Material Booklet to write a source-based essay on the following topic: To what extent was the USSR to blame for the Cold War that developed after the Second World War? Be sure to use the sources provided to construct your argument and remember to reference the sources by letter. 40 marks Total: 150 marks IEB Copyright © 2013 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION NOVEMBER 2013 HISTORY: PAPER I SOURCE MATERIAL FOR SECTION B AND SECTION C IEB Copyright © 2013 PLEASE TURN OVER NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I – SOURCE MATERIAL SOURCE A Page ii of iv Western historiography* of the origins of the Cold War The Traditional* View At first Western historians blamed the USSR. They said Stalin was trying to build up a Soviet empire. The Revisionist* View Later, however, some Western historians blamed the USA. Some revisionists argued that America's chief aim in the years after the war was to make sure that there was an 'open door' for American trade, and that this led the American government to make sure that countries remained capitalist like the USA. The Post-Revisionist View Later still historians think that BOTH the USA and the USSR were to blame – that there were hatreds on both sides. Most recent historians agree that the Cold War was primarily a clash of beliefs – Communism versus Capitalism. [Adapted from <www.johndclare.net/cold_war3_answer.htm> Accessed 19 July 2012] * historiography = the study of different writings or interpretations of history * traditional = original or accepted view * revisionist = changing existing theories or interpretations SOURCE B An extract from the book The Tragedy of American Diplomacy by the American historian William A Williams Who said that capitalism is meek and mild? Capitalism is by nature aggressive. Businessmen want to dominate the world market, and think it is good to want to do so. After 1946 American businessmen had the American government enthusiastically behind them. And together they set about systematically destroying 'the opposition' – which, in global terms, meant the Soviet Union. It was American capitalism that caused the Cold War, and it had the additional advantage that the Communists (since they used political means to assert themselves) could so easily be made to look oppressive* and tyrannical*. They didn't stand a chance. [Williams, William A. The Tragedy of American Diplomacy, Norton, 1959, page 39] * oppressive = cruel and unjust * tyrannical = cruel and giving harsh punishment to those who disobey orders SOURCE C Soviet historiography Soviet historiography was based on the standard Marxist line that conflict was inevitable*, given the hostility* of capitalism towards the USSR, which was seen as the bastion* of communism. Soviet writers highlighted the actions of Soviet foreign policy as attempts to safeguard the Revolution against the aggressive capitalist powers in the West. In the Official History of the USSR (1959), B Ponomaryov described the Truman Doctrine as a smokescreen* for US expansion and Marshall Aid as a tool of US power and influence. It was not until Gorbachev's refusal to support unpopular communist regimes* in Eastern Europe at the end of the 1980s that Soviet writers could be critical of Soviet dominance over the Eastern bloc. [Phillips, Steve The Cold War: Conflict in Europe and Asia, Heinemann, 2001, page 143] * inevitable = unavoidable * hostility = opposition * bastion = stronghold * smokescreen = cover-up * regimes = governments which do not have the support of the majority IEB Copyright © 2013 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I – SOURCE MATERIAL SOURCE D Page iii of iv Simon Willis was born in England in 1946 to a British mother and an American father. He moved to the USA in 1950 and recalls his childhood in that country We were brought up to hate the communists – 'Commies' we called them, both the Chinese and the Russians. With the Ruskies [Russians] it was the atomic bomb we feared most. My worst, recurring nightmare was nuclear war. I used to wake up in a sweat thinking that it had started and wondering where we were going to hide. I dreamed of those great mushroom clouds of A-bombs [atom bombs] going off somewhere in the distance, waiting for the blast, then the radiation. We'd been told that we'd have four minutes warning of an A-bomb attack – four minutes from the time the siren sounded to the moment the bomb went off – and my friends and I used to discuss what we'd do in those last four minutes. We joked about stuffing ourselves with ice-cream, but really I think that deep down we were really scared. Quite a few of us really thought the world was going to end – blown to bits by the Commies. It would be their fault of course. [Ross, Stewart Witness to History: The Collapse of Communism, Heinemann, 2004, page 13] SOURCE E A cartoon entitled Who's next to be liberated from freedom? by David Low, a British cartoonist, and published in March 1948. Stalin is seated while his Foreign Minister, Molotov, stands spinning the globe. On Stalin's desk is a photograph of the United States Secretary of State George Marshall Who's next to be liberated from freedom? [Condon, Christopher The Making of the Modern World, Macmillan, 1987, page 465] IEB Copyright © 2013 PLEASE TURN OVER NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER I – SOURCE MATERIAL SOURCE F Page iv of iv A Soviet cartoon by Krokodil published in 1948 shows European countries on their knees worshipping their US paymaster [Waugh, Steven Essential Modern World History, Nelson Thornes, 2001, page 239] SOURCE G An extract from a speech delivered by former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill speaking in the presence of President Truman in Fulton, USA on 6 March 1946 A shadow has fallen upon the scenes so lately lighted by the Allied victory. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste on the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended. Behind that line lie the states of central and eastern Europe. The Communist parties have been raised to power far beyond their numbers and are seeking everywhere to obtain totalitarian* control. This is certainly not the liberated* Europe we fought to build. Nor is it one which allows permanent peace. [Walsh, Ben Modern World History, John Murray, 1996, page 249] * totalitarian = authoritarian and dictatorial * liberated = freed SOURCE H Stalin's response to Churchill's speech (1946) Mr Churchill now takes the stance of warmonger* and he is not alone. He has friends not only in Britain, but in the United States. As a result of the German invasion, the Soviet Union's loss of life has been several times greater than that of Britain and the USA put together. And so what can be surprising about the fact that the Soviet Union, anxious for its future safety, is trying to see that governments loyal to the Soviet Union, should exist in the countries through which the Germans made their invasion. We are not expansionist.* [Waugh, Steven Essential Modern World History, Nelson Thornes, 2001, page 233] * warmonger = aggressor; looking to start to a war * expansionist = empire building IEB Copyright © 2013 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION NOVEMBER 2013 HISTORY: PAPER II Time: 2 hours 150 marks PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY 1. This question paper consists of 4 pages. Please check that your question paper is complete. 2. Read the questions carefully. 3. Answer ONE question from Section A. Answer BOTH questions from Section B. 4. Accurate and adequate factual knowledge is essential; equally important is the ability to use relevant information critically in answering the questions. 5. Start each question on a new page. 6. Number your answers exactly as the questions are numbered in the question paper. 7. Leave lines open between answers. 8. It is in your interest to write legibly. Work in an orderly way and present your answers as neatly as possible. IEB Copyright © 2013 PLEASE TURN OVER Page 2 of 4 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER II SECTION A DISCURSIVE ESSAY Answer ONE question from this section. Write a discursive essay showing evidence of analysis, interpretation, explanation and argument on one of the following: THEME CIVIL SOCIETY PROTESTS QUESTION 1 Although they both fought for an end to inequality, the Civil Rights Movement and the Women's Movement had nothing else in common. Critically assess the accuracy of this statement by referring to the aims, methods and achievements of these two protest movements in the United States in the 1960s. [70] OR THEME SOUTH AFRICA'S EMERGENCE AS A DEMOCRACY QUESTION 2 The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was an important bridge between the old and the new, and helped South Africans to move from apartheid to democracy. Critically assess the accuracy of this statement by referring to the aims, methods and achievements of the TRC for the period 1995 to 1998. [70] 70 marks IEB Copyright © 2013 Page 3 of 4 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER II SECTION B EXTENDED WRITING Answer BOTH questions from this section. Each piece of extended writing should be approximately 350 – 400 words in length. You should use your own knowledge and you may also refer to the visual provided to answer the questions. THEME CIVIL SOCIETY PROTESTS QUESTION 3 Shown below is a famous photograph entitled 'The Black Power Salute' taken at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico. Two African American athletes made history by staging a silent protest against racial discrimination in the USA. The two athletes stood with their heads bowed and a black-gloved hand raised as the American National Anthem played during the victory ceremony. [<http://inthepastlane.com/tag/black-power-salute-mexico-city-olympics/> Date Accessed 25 March 2013] Explain the role played by the Black Power Movement to end racial discrimination in the USA in the 1960s by answering the following questions: (a) What was the Black Power Movement and what were its aims? (b) Why did African Americans support the Black Power Movement? (c) To what extent was the Black Power Movement successful in achieving it aims? [40] IEB Copyright © 2013 PLEASE TURN OVER Page 4 of 4 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE: HISTORY: PAPER II THEME SOUTH AFRICA'S EMERGENCE AS A DEMOCRACY QUESTION 4 This photograph was taken in the United Kingdom in 1980. The photograph shows anti-apartheid demonstrators protesting against Barclays Bank's involvement in South Africa and also calls for people not to buy South African products. They carry posters in support of the arms ban and suggest that Barclays Bank is breaking this ban by remaining involved in South Africa. [<http://www.kpbs.org/news/2012/jan/09/independent-lens-have-you-heardjohannesburg/> Date Accessed 13 March 2013] Explain the role played by international pressure in the 1970s and 1980s in helping to bring about the collapse of Apartheid by answering the following questions: (a) Why did the international community place sanctions* on South Africa? *sanctions = bans and restrictions (b) What political, economic and social sanctions did the international community place on South Africa? (c) Explain the consequences of sanctions for the South African government. [40] 80 marks Total: 150 marks IEB Copyright © 2013