Instruction:
Question #1. Do you agree that the Treaty of Versailles was a compromise between a treaty of force and a treaty of ideas? 10 marks (150 words)
Question #2. Fascism as an ideology did not evolve but saw a mushroom growth during the inter-war period. Evaluate the above statement. 15 marks (250 words)
(Examiner will pay special attention to the candidate's grasp of his/her material, its relevance to the subject chosen, and to his/ her ability to think constructively and to present his/her ideas concisely, logically and effectively).
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Question #1. Do you agree that the Treaty of Versailles was a compromise between a treaty of force and a treaty of ideas? 10 marks (150 words)
Approach:
Hints:
The Treaty of Versailles was the most important of the peace treaties of World War I. It ended the state of war between Germany and the Allied Powers. It was signed on 28 June 1919 in the Palace of Versailles.
The Treaty of Versailles was a compromise between a treaty of force and a treaty of ideas:
In conclusion, it has to be said that this collection of peace treaties was not a conspicuous success. It had the unfortunate effect of dividing Europe into the states which wanted to revise the settlement (Germany being the main one), and those which wanted to preserve it. On the whole the latter turned out to be only lukewarm in their support. The USA failed to ratify the settlement and never joined the League of Nations.
Question #2. Fascism as an ideology did not evolve but saw a mushroom growth during the inter-war period. Evaluate the above statement. 15 marks (250 words)
Approach:
William Ebenstein says that stripped to its essentials, fascism is the totalitarian organisation of government and society by a single party dictatorship which is intensely nationalist, militarist and imperialist. According to him although it lacks a coherent philosophy, the core principles can be said to be 1. Anti-rationalism 2.Struggle 3.Leadership and elitism 4.Socialism 5.Ultranationalism
Whereas liberalism, conservatism and socialism are nineteenth-century ideologies, fascism is a child of the twentieth century, specifically of the period between the two world wars. Fascism emerged very much as a revolt against modernity, against the ideas and values of the Enlightenment. The Nazis in Germany proclaimed that ‘1789 is Abolished’. In Fascist Italy slogans such as ‘Believe, Obey, Fight’ and ‘Order, Authority, Justice’ replaced the more familiar principles of the French Revolution, ‘Liberty, Equality and Fraternity’. According to O’Sullivan, fascism came not only as a ‘bolt from the blue’, but also attempted to make the political world anew, quite literally to root out and destroy the inheritance of conventional political thought.
Fascist movements drew their membership and support largely from such lower middle-class elements. Lipset hence referred to fascism an ‘extremism of the centre’ a revolt of the lower middle classes, a fact that helps to explain the hostility of fascism to both capitalism and communism. Fascist regimes were not overthrown by popular revolt or protest but by defeat in the Second World War. Since 1945, fascist movements have achieved only marginal success, encouraging some to believe that fascism was a specifically interwar phenomenon (according to Ernst Nolte), linked to the unique combination of historical circumstances that characterized that period. Others, however, regard fascism as an ever-present danger, seeing its roots in human psychology.
Arguments in favour of fascism as inter-war phenomenon:
But others questioned the proposition that fascism was merely a product of a specific time in history. Erich Fromm traces the emergence of fascism to human psychology. Fromm suggest that it is an ever-present threat as it is based on political opportunism that exploits collective human insecurity and fear. Hannah Arendt also says that fascism is rooted in cultural problem.
The rise in ultranationalist governments across the world in the present day where the political leaders are able to manipulate people by targeting their vulnerabilities indeed raises questions about the possibility of emergence of fascism in the 21st century in conditions that are far different from the interwar period.
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