We will be viewing Rape of Europa in all classes of AT European History, which examines the atrocities of the war with respect to the Holocaust, the policy to exterminate the Poles, and the horrific Eastern front, including the Siege of Leningrad. It zeros in on the confiscation of Jewish property, especially priceless works of art, such as Woman in Gold. Efforts today to continue to return expropriated property to descendants is discussed at length. A list is available here. repatriate expropriated property
Course Materials
- Home
- Syllabus
- DEI Statement
- Harkness Method
- Unit 1: Renaissance and Historical Habits of Mind
- Unit I Study Guide: Renaissance(s): Italian, N. Europe & Ottoman
- Unit 2 Study Guide: Reformation
- Unit 3 Study Guide: Monarchs, Commercial (Capitalist) Expansion & Science
- Unit 4: Conflicting Kaleidoscopes: French Revoluti...
- Unit 5: Ideology & Revolutions
- Unit 6: Nationalism, Unification & Changing Jewish...
- Unit 7: Late Modernity - Second Industrial Revolut...
- Unit 8: Imperialism and Resistance, "Worldly" War...
- Unit 9: Liberal Democracy, Communism & Fascism
- Unit 10: Cold War, Decolonization, and the Europea...
- Magnified: Diversity & Identity Research Paper
- EU MOCK COUNCIL 2020: COVID-19
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