Schedule of topics
Introduction and Overview. The roots of the conflict in Europe: I. Versailles and the end of European Supremacy. Rich: 3-77.
II. Hitler’s World View. German Foreign policy after the Nazi Seizure of Power. Rich: 3-77.
III. Fascist Italy in the nineteen thirties: Mussolini’s Drive for Empire. Knox: 3-43.
The roots of the conflict in the Pacific: I. The Emergence of Japanese expansionism.
II. China and Japan to Manchukuo. MM: 143-168
Appeasement and Isolationism: Europe and Asia: 1934-1938. Rich: 81-89.
Hitler’s First Strikes: Austria, Sudetenland and the destruction of Czechoslovakia. Rich: 90-120; MM: 1-17.
War in Europe: Operation Weserübung and Fall Gelb. The “Strange Defeat:” the Fall of France. The Battle of Britain. Rich 121-164; MM: 44-90; Knox 44-133.
Mussolini’s “Parallel War.” Rich 165-203; MM: 91-109; Knox: 134-230.
“Barbarossa:” Hitler’s attack on Russia. Rich 204-223; MM: 110-142.
The Road to Pearl Harbor. The Japanese offensive in the Pacific. Rich: 224-250.
The Japanese “Southern Advance” to Midway. MM 169-195:
The Pacific War to Mid-1944. MM: 196-233.
The Battle of the Atlantic. MM: 234-261.
North Africa and the downfall of Mussolini’s Regime. MM: 262-303; Knox: 231-285.
Economic Mobilization and the Home fronts: Daily Life and Social Change during the Conflict. I. Germany and Italy. Harrison: 122-223.
II. Britain and the Commonwealth. The United States. Harrison 43-121.
III. The Soviet Union. Harrison 268-301.
IV. Japan. Harrison 224-267.
Vichy France.
Nazi policies in occupied Europe. The Final Solution. Browning.
Stalingrad and the Eastern Front to 1944. MM 273-303.
Mass Bombing. MM 304-335.
Islands' Hopping: Offensive in the Pacific. MM 336-373.
D Day and the end of the War in Europe. MM: 373-483
The Final Offensive in the Pacific
Wartime Diplomacy. The Atomic Bomb. MM: 484-526.
Conclusions