The Berlin Wall and Cold War Era Course Class Time

Course
Class Time
The Berlin Wall and Cold War Era
January 5th, 2015 - January 23rd, 2015
Mon: 1.30 pm – 3 pm & 3.15 pm – 4.45 pm
Tue: 9 am – 10.30 am & 11 am – 12.30 pm
Wed: 1.30 pm – 3 pm & 3.15 pm – 4.45 pm
Thu: 9 am – 10.30 am & 10.45 am – 11.30 am
ECTS
Course Level
Instructor
4 ECTS credit points (45 contact hours)
Undergraduate students with an interest in politics, social
sciences and contemporary history
Dr. Jochen Hille
Course related
department/ faculty Berlin Graduate School of Social Sciences
Course Description
For almost 30 years, the Berlin Wall was a symbol of the division of the city of
Berlin, of Germany and of Europe during the era of the Cold War between the
two superpowers, the United States of America and the Soviet Union.
Consequently, the fall of the Wall in 1989 was a hugely symbolic turning point in
world history. But how can we explain the building of such a dividing monument?
How can we account for its fall in 1989? And how does the Wall influence our
lives today? The course will provide answers to such questions via readings of
texts from political science, sociology and history, while also taking the
opportunity to explore the grounds on which the events between 1961 and 1989
took place.
Course Objective
The aim of this course is to introduce participants to the multi-faceted history of
the Berlin Wall. After a brief introduction to the historical and ideological
backgrounds of the Cold War this course will turn to a detailed analysis of the
event history of the Berlin Wall: from the end of World War II via the formation
of two blocs until the building of the Berlin Wall, from the building of the Wall via
its fall in 1989 until today. To complete the picture of the history of the
German/Berlin division and the Cold War, we will focus on the social, economic,
and (popular) cultural history of the two German states and Germany since reunification.
Required Textbook
Supplementary materials will be handed out
Reading(s)/ Reference(s)
Taylor, Frederick. 2006. The Berlin Wall. 13 August 1961 – 9 November 1989.
London:Bloomsbury.
Course Requirements/ Assessment Components
Attendance rate, participation in class, essay, interview(s)
Class Schedule
PART I: Introduction and historical background/overview
1. Introduction and course outline
2. Mapping Germany, Europe, and the World: East + West, Then + Now
3. Historical and ideological backgrounds: The Soviet Union and the Western
Allies from the Russian Revolution until the end of World War II
4. Excursion: Overview of German history 1918 – 1994, Permanent Exhibition in
the German Historical Museum
PART II: Event history and its interpretation(s)
5. From the end of World War II until the formation of the two German states
1949
6. Two blocs, two German states, and two Berlins until the building of the Berlin
Wall 1961
7. The Building of the Berlin Wall 1961: How it happened, why it happened, and
what it meant
8. Excursion: Berlin Wall Memorial at Bernauer Straße
9. Two blocs, two German states, and two Berlins in the age of the Wall, 1961 –
1989
10. The coming down of the Berlin Wall 1989: How it happened, why it
happened, and what it meant
11. The aftermath of the Fall of the Berlin Wall: German reunification and its
domestic, European and global implications
PART III: “What life with the Wall was like”
12. Society and Economy in East and West Germany
13. (Popular) culture in East and West Germany
14. Refugees from East Germany
15. Excursion: Palace of tears (Friedrichstraße)
16. Oppression and control in East Germany
17. Excursion: Stasi Museum Berlin (Normannenstraße)
PART IV: “What life without the Wall has been like”
18. Introduction
19. Interviews/Fieldwork
20. Presentations of interviews in class
21. Film: “Goodbye Lenin”
22. In-depth discussion of film
PART V: Summary
23. Making sense of the past?
24. Wrap-up and Evaluation
Schedule Winter University 2015 “ COURSE TITLE”
Mo, January5th
Tue, January 6th
Topic of the
day:
PART I: Introduction
and historical
background
PART I: Introduction and
historical background
PART I: Introduction
and historical
background
PART II: Event history
9-10.30am
&
11-12.30pm TUE
10.45 -11.30 THU
No class
Ideological background of the
Cold War
No class
Two blocs, two German
states, and two Berlins
No class
1.30-3pm
&
3.15-4.45pm
Introduction and course
outline
No class
Excursion: German Historical
Museum
No class
No class
Mo, January 12th
Tue, January 13th
Wed, January 7th
Wed, January 14th
Thu, January 8th
Thu, January 15th
Fri, January 9th
Fri, January 16th
Topic of the
day:
PART II: Event
history
PART II: Event history
PART III: “What life
with the Wall was like”
PART III: “What life
with the Wall was like”
9-10.30am
&
11-12.30pm TUE
10.45 -11.30 THU
No class
Excursion: Berlin Wall Memorial
at Bernauer Straße
No class
Oppression in East Germany
Excursion: Stasi Museum
Berlin
No class
1.30-3pm
&
3.15-4.45pm
The coming down of the
Berlin Wall 1989
No class
Society and Economy in East
and West Germany
No class
No class
Mo, January 19th
Tue, January 20th
Wed, January 21st
Topic of the
day:
PART III: “What life
with the Wall was
like”
PART IV: “What life
without the Wall has
been like”
PART IV: “What life
without the Wall has
been like”
9-10.30am
&
11-12.30pm TUE
10.45 -11.30 THU
No class
Film: “Goodbye Lenin”
No class
1.30-3pm
&
3.15-4.45pm
(Popular) culture in East
and West Germany
No class
Interviews/Fieldwork with
Berliners
Thu, January 22nd
Fri, January 23rd
PART IV: “What life
without the Wall has
been like”
Summary: Making sense of
the past?
No class
No class
No class