Prof. Julie Hessler

Office:  McKenzie 351

Office hours: Tues. 10:15-11:30,

Thurs. 1:00 - 2:45 (or by appointment)

Telephone:  346-4857 (o), 302-9032 (h)

hessler@darkwing.uoregon.edu

 

 

 

HISTORY 428/528  WESTERN EUROPE SINCE 1945

Politics and social change

Tues./Thurs. 4:00-5:20, Pacific 30

                                                      

 

 

Course description:  This course centers on the social transformation of Western Europe in the postwar era.  Major themes include the shift from a depression mentality to affluence in every country of Western Europe; the new consumerism; the cultural revolution of the 1960s-70s; changes in women’s roles and rights; and the evolution of Western European societies from ethnically homogeneous to multiracial and multiethnic societies.  We will explore these issues against a backdrop of national politics and European integration.

 

Grades will be based on:

6 unannounced quizzes on assigned readings (I’ll drop the lowest grade)  30%.

1 short (4-5 page) paper on supplementary readings, with oral presentation:  20%.

1 final research paper (10-12 pages).  50%.

In addition, active, thoughtful participation may raise your grade one notch.

Because the short papers are to be discussed in class, I will not accept late papers.

 

Required texts available at the bookstore:

Paul Ginsborg, A History of Contemporary Italy

Lawrence Wylie, Village in the Vaucluse

Ron Ramdin, Reimaging Britain

 

Required text available through used bookstores on-line (e.g. abebooks.com):  Gisela Kaplan, Contemporary Western European Feminism.  Unfortunately, this book is no longer in print.  There is one copy on reserve at Knight, and another nine copies are available through Orbis.  Many other copies are available on line.  If you order one quickly, you should be able to get the book at a very reasonable price.

 

 

Class schedule:

 

 

Tues., Sept. 30  Introduction

 

Thurs., Oct. 2  “Liberation” and political renewal on the continent

 

Required reading:  Paul Ginsborg, A History of Contemporary Italy, pp. 8-71.

 

Extra assignment for graduate students: two essays of your choice from Politics of Retribution in Europe (on reserve at Knight, D810.C696 P6 2000), pp. 133-232 (be prepared to describe in class).

 

Tues., Oct. 7  Italian politics and society:  renewal or retrenchment?

 

Required reading:  Contemporary Italy, 72-210.

 

Thurs., Oct. 9  Welfare states in formation

 

No required reading for undergraduates.  Graduate students:  read some of the supplementary list.

 

Supplementary reading:  Richard Titmuss, “The Social Division of Welfare,” in his Essays on the Welfare State (Knight reserve HN 389.T58); Denise Riley, “Some Peculiarities of Social Policy concerning Women in Wartime and Postwar Britain,” and Jane Jenson, “The Liberation and New Rights for French Women,” both in Behind the Lines, pp. 260-72 and 272-85 (Knight reserve D639.W7 B43); T. H. Marshall, “Citizenship and Social Class,” in his Citizenship and Social Class and Other Essays (Knight reserve HN400.S6 M378 1950), 1-85.

 

Tues., Oct. 14  French society at the start of the 1950s

 

Required reading:  Village in the Vaucluse (to p. 325, “Peyrane Today”)

 

Thurs., Oct. 16  French politics from the Fourth to the Fifth Republics

 

Required reading:  Document handout.

 

Tues., Oct. 21  An age of affluence

 

Required reading:  Village in the Vaucluse, 325-84; Contemporary Italy, 210-53.

 

Supplementary reading:  Michael Wildt, “Changes in Consumption and Social Practice in West Germany During the 1950s,” in Getting and Spending:  European and American Consumer Societies in the Twentieth Century, 301-16 (Knight reserve HC110.C6 G48 1998); Arnold Sywotek, “From Starvation to Excess?  Trends in the Consumer Society from the 1940s to the 1970s,” in The Miracle Years:  A Cultural History of West Germany, 1949-1968, 341-59 (Knight reserve DD258.7.M57 2001); Kaspar Maase, “Establishing Cultural Democracy:  Youth, ‘Americanization’, and the Irresistable Rise of Popular Culture,” in the same book, pp. 428-50; Paul Ginsborg, A History of Contemporary Italy, pp. 210-53 (Knight reserve DG572.G48 1990); Richard F. Kuisel, “Yankee Go Home:  The Left, Coca Cola, and the Cold War,” in his Seducing the French, 37-69 (Knight reserve DC59.8.U6 K85 1993); Paul Rock and Stanley Cohen, “The Teddy Boy,” (xerox on reserve) and Dick Hebdige, “The Meaning of Mod” (xerox on reserve).

 

Thurs., Oct. 23  Vatican II and the secularization of Western Europe

 

Required reading:  Contemporary Italy, 254-97 (esp. 259-61).

 

Supplementary reading:  “Catholics:  Imagination and Sin,” in A History of Private Life, vol. 5, pp. 285-313 (Knight reserve GT2400.H5713 v. 5); Maurice Larkin, “Angels on the Point of a Needle:  Counting Catholics in France and Spain,” in Problems in Contemporary French History (Knight reserve, DC33.P75 2000b).

 

Tues., Oct. 28  Youth revolt and the “bullet years”

 

Required reading: Contemporary Italy, 298-405.

 

Supplementary readings:  Ingrid Gilcher-Holtey, “May 1968 in France,” pp. 253-76 of 1968:  The World Transformed (Knight reserve D839.2.A17), and from the same volume, Claus Leggewie, “A Laboratory of Postindustrial Society:  Reassessing the 1960s in Germany,” pp. 277-94; Stuart J. Hilwig, “The Revolt against the Establishment:  Students and the Press in West Germany and Italy,” pp. 321-50; Gerd-Rainer Horn, “The Changing Nature of the European Working Class,” pp. 351-72.

 

Thurs., Oct. 30  Introduction to women’s liberation in Europe

 

Required reading:  Contemporary Western European Feminism, 1-59.

 

Tues., Nov. 4  Feminism and social change in social democratic Scandinavia

 

Required reading:  Contemporary Western European Feminism, 60-102.

 

Supplementary reading:  Kristina Orfali, “The Rise and Fall of the Swedish Model,” in A History of Private Life, vol. 5, pp. 417-49 (Knight reserve GT2400.H5713 v. 5); Gosta Esping-Andersen, Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism, pp. tba.; Norman Ginsburg, “Sweden:  The Social Democratic Case,” in Comparing Welfare States, pp. 173-99 (Knight reserve HV51.C762 1993); Sven Olsson, “Towards a Transformation of the Swedish Welfare State,” in Modern Welfare States, pp. 44-82 (Knight reserve HV37.M62 1987b).

 

Thurs., Nov. 6  Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, France:  political currents

 

Required reading:  Contemporary Western European Feminism, 103-78, plus handout.

 

Tues., Nov. 11  Revolution in Southern Europe

 

Required reading:  Contemporary Western European Feminism, 179-283.

 

Thurs., Nov. 13  Toward multiracial Europe:  immigration in Britain

 

Required reading: Reimaging Britain, 141-193.

 

Supplementary reading:  Alec Hargreaves, Immigration, “Race” and Ethnicity in Contemporary France, 1-85;  Ulrich Herbert, A History of Foreign Labor in Germany, 1880-1980, pp. 193-257 (Knight reserve HD8458.A2 H3913 1990); Jane Kramer, Unsettling Europe, pp. 77-120 (Knight reserve); Rogers Brubaker, Citizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany, pp. 138-89 (Knight reserve JN2919.B78 1992); Hans Korno Rasmussen, No Entry:  Immigration Policy in Europe, pp. 137-52; Ellie Vasta, “Rights and Racism in a New Country of Immigration:  The Italian Case,” in John Wrench and John Solomos, eds., Racism and Migration in Western Europe (Oxford, 1993); Giovanna Campani, “Immigration and Racism in Southern Europe:  the Italian Case,” Ethnic and Racial Studies 16 (1993):  507-35 (in the stacks at Knight, HT 1501.E73).

 

Tues., Nov. 18  British society and politics in the Thatcher era

 

Required reading:  Reimaging Britain, 193-257.

 

Thurs., Nov. 20  Film:  My Beautiful Laundrette (begin).  No required reading.

 

Tues., Nov. 25  Film (end). 

 

Required reading:  Reimaging Britain, 258-349.

 

Thurs., Nov. 27  No class -- happy Thanksgiving!

 

Tues., Dec. 2  Towards European unification

 

Required reading:  Achille Albinotti, “The New Europe and the West,” pp. 1-37 in A New Europe?  Special issue of Daedalus, ed. Stephen R. Graubard (Knight reserve D1051.N48 1964); in the same volume, Raymond Aron, “Old Nations, New Europe,” pp. 38-61; Oliver Franks, “Britain and Europe,” pp. 89-104. 

 

Thurs., Dec. 4  A new Europe?

 

Required reading:   ‑Tony Judt, “A Grand Illusion,” in his A Grand Illusion? (Knight reserve D443.J83 1996), pp. 3-44; and find something interesting to share on your own on European unification.

 

Final paper due in my office, McKenzie 351, no later than 1:00, Wednesday, Dec. 10.

 

 

 

Assignment for short papers:  The basic purpose of this assignment is for you to read one or more additional texts on the topic of our course.  In your paper, your primary aim should be to explicate your text or texts, i.e. to identify the main argument or arguments and to describe how the author develops them.  At the same time, you should try to contextualize your text against the other things we have read (or, if you are feeling energetic, against other works that you have found).  For example, if you were assigned Michael Wildt’s article on consumption in West Germany, you might compare his portrayal against what you know about the British and French cases; or if you were assigned an article on the Swedish welfare state, you might try to relate it to the information in Gisela Kaplan’s book on women’s status and the women’s movement in Scandinavia.  Ideally, the additional readings and short papers will give you a helpful angle on the core readings for the course.  As for your in-class presentation, I’m looking for something very short:  all you need to be able to do is to explain, in a few minutes, what you got out of your text, and your fellow students or I might ask you a question or two about it.