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Coursework Assignment: "To what extent did the policy
of appeasement cause the Second World War?"“How horrible,
fantastic, incredible it is that we should be digging trenches and trying
on gas-masks here because of a quarrel in a far-away country between
people of whom we know nothing!” – Neville Chamberlain, 1938
Introduction
"Appeasement" can be defined as "giving in
to someone's demands as far as is reasonably possible to avoid
conflict". Throughout the 1930s, Britain and France in particular were
very keen on using this policy. They used it in their dealings with Japan
(who attacked Manchuria), Italy (who attacked Abyssinnia) and of course
Germany (who reached a Naval Agreement with Britain, remilitarised the
Rhineland, secured an Anshcluss with Austria and took control of the
Sudetenland).
Since World War Two, politicians have been desperate to
avoid being accused of appeasement. This has created aggressive foreign
policies which are arguably much less well-considered, and just as
damaging: Britain plunged into the Suez Crisis and the USA got bogged down
in Vietnam (and now Iraq) rather than "surrender" to the demands of "the
next Hitler".
This essay assignment will test your ability to
- Explain how and why Britain and France pursued a policy of
appeasement
- Explain how appeasement led to World War Two
- Explain how other factors also contributed
- Explain how these factors are linked together to reach a conclusion.
Although class time will be given over to this assignment,
you will also be expected to work on it at home. Your teacher will be able
to give you some general advice on structuring essays and about events,
issues and concepts - but the actual assignment must be entirely your own
work.
Stage 1: Gather your evidence, form your views
Through your studies, you should already be familiar with
the main causes of World War Two (German bitterness about Versailles;
weaknesses of the League of Nations; the impact of the Depression; the
rise of aggressive dictatorships in Japan, Italy and Germany; the policy
of appeasement led by Britain and France).
Stage 2: Write the first draft of your essay
Once you feel confident that you understand the events and
issues, you can start thinking about writing your essay.
Exhibit A. A sample markscheme for an
essay at GCSE / IGCSE level.
|
L1 |
General points; little evidence of background
knowledge from classroom studies |
|
L2 |
One-sided answer; factual details about one
factor described |
|
L3 |
One-sided answer; role of one factor
explained
OR
Multi-causal answer; factual details about
several factors described |
|
L4 |
Multi-causal answer; role of several factors
explained, but in
isolation |
|
L5 |
Multi-causal answer; role of several factors
explained, and linked together
|
Exhibit B. How
to write essays at GCSE / IGCSE History. A step-by-step guide by Mr.
Tarr.
Stage 3: Write the final draft of your essay
In theory, your essay could be handed in at this point. However, before
doing so it is a good idea to have a look at some other sources
-
Secondary Sources (these are quite easy to follow)
-
Primary Sources (these are a bit more difficult - don't feel you
have to use them!)
History in the News for IST Coursework:
Appeasement
1. Why has
Germany taken so long to pay off its WWI debt? Germany is finally
paying off World War I reparations, with the last 70 million euro (£60m)
payment drawing the debt to a close. 2. Briefing:
Computer traders blamed for Wall Street crash 3. Germany
still owes £50m in reparations for the First World
War 4. Glorious
39's scorn for appeasement is unjustified #historyteacher (via
activehistory.co.uk / classtools.net) 5. World
War 2: Poland was conspiring with Nazis to destroy Soviet Union, Russia
claims 6. Vladimir
Putin condemns appeasement of Hitler on 70th anniversary of WW2
outbreak 7. EyeWitness
Reports: Watching the start of World War II 8. Stalin's
bid for a new world order 9. BBC
Viewpoint: The Nazi-Soviet Pact 10. Treaty
of Versailles: 90 years old this weekend 11. Stock
market optimists need to read a history of the Great
Depression 12. 103
Year Old reflects on 1929 > 2008 13. Wall
Street's Final '08 Toll: $6.9 Trillion Wiped Out 14. Depression
offers lessons for financial crisis 15. Hitler's
desk set on which Munich pact was signed in 1938 put up for sale in online
auction 16. Ideas
and Trends - Appeasement’s Taint Is All in Hindsight -
NYTimes.com 17. Germany
end World War One reparations after 92 years with £59m final
payment Germany will finally clear its First World War debt by
repaying nearly £60million this weekend.The £22billion reparations were
set by the Allied victors – mostly Britain, France and America – as
compensation and punishment for the 1914-18 war. 18. FTSE
falls for 4th day on Greek contagion fears | Reuters FTSE falls
for 4th day on Greek contagion fears 19. 'Great
depression' gaffe lifted from Prime Minister's
website 20. History
judges Neville Chamberlain unfairly, says his
granddaughter 21. Poland
angry at Soviet war role 22. Putin
blames Britain for Russia's invasion of Poland on the 70th anniversary of
WWII 23. Modern
views on the Nazi-Soviet pact 24. Neville
Chamberlain should be praised, not buried 25. Russia
declassifies secret documents on Nazi-Soviet pact 26.
Amid
Russian push to recast history, Russian historian blames Poland for
starting WWII 27. CNN
Online Video - Great Depression vs. Now - Which was
Worse? 28. Britain
on the brink of an economic depression, say experts -
Telegraph 29. Girl
from iconic Great Depression photo: 'We were
ashamed' 30. 70th
Anniversary of the Munich Agreement 31. The
Parallel with 1929 We Ignore at Our Peril 32. Terror
on Wall Street, 1920 33. Rethinking
Churchill and the Allied warmongers World War II, we know on good
authority, was unnecessary, the authority being none other than Winston
Churchill. By unnecessary Churchill meant that if the Allies' appeasement
of Hitler hadn't taken place earlier, the war wouldn't have to have been
to fou 34. 35.
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