AP WORLD: Ch 28-30 REVIEW GUIDE

· Was World War I was the first great turning point of the 20th century.

· Examine the influence of Western-educated elites, both male and female, on the emerging nationalist movements of the early 20th century.

· Describe the causes of World War I.

· Describe the effect of World War I on European colonies.

· Trace how the Treaty of Versailles led to the rise of totalitarianism in Italy and Germany.

· Identify the weapons and technology that led to massive casualties in the war.

· Summarize how the entry of the United States changed the war, both militarily and politically.

· Appraise the unique techniques used by Gandhi in protesting British colonialism.

· Describe the global results of World War I.

· Describe the effect of the Great Depression on various societies.

· Describe the reasons for the lack of resolve among the Western governments to intervene against authoritarianism in this era.

· Summarize the political, psychological, and economic results of World War I.

· Characterize the Roaring Twenties.

· Explain why Italy was the first country in western Europe to experience a sweeping change of its governmental form.

· Discuss evidence of political and social change for women in the West in the 1920s.

· Describe how the United States was so successful in its rapid economic advance after the war.

· Identify some political and social changes among the settler societies in this era.

· Describe the factors that led to Japan’s shift from a liberal democracy to a military controlled government.

· Was the Great Depression inevitable? Why or why not?

· Define “totalitarianism” and provide examples.

· Compare totalitarianism in the U.S.S.R. and Germany.

· Trace the unique course of the United States in answering the dilemma of the Great Depression.

· Summarize the effects of the Great Depression on the politics in Latin America.

· Give reasons that Japan embarked on a foreign policy of conquest.

· Relate Great Depression to political instability.

· Identify ways that the economic crisis affected patterns of social behavior.

· Was World War II inevitable? Why or why not?

· Compare the strategies and tactics of World War I to World War II.

· Compare the Germans’ policy toward Jews and the Japanese policy toward the Chinese.

· Trace the early successes of the Germans and Japanese. Why were the Germans and Japanese unable to sustain their level of victories?

· What role did the U.S.S.R. play in allied victory?

· Describe how the war conferences contributed to the Cold War.

· Can you think of any ways that would have kept India from dividing after independence?

· How did the United Nations’ plans for the Middle East differ from what occurred?


CHAPTER 28

Adolf Hitler

Aimé Césaire

alliance system

Allies

Archduke Ferdinand

Armenian genocide

armistice

Ataturk

Balfour Declaration

Battle of Gallipoli

Battle of Jutland

Battle of the Marne

Big Four

blank check

Central Powers

David Lloyd George

diktat

Eastern Front

Franco-Prussian War

Gamal Abdul Nasser

Georges Clemenceau

Ho Chi Minh

Indian Congress Party

Kaiser Wilhelm II

League of Nations

Léon Damas

Leon Pinsker

Leópold Sédar Senghor

mandates

Mohandas Gandhi

Montagu-Chelmsford

reforms

Mutiny of Ahmad Orabi

pan-Africanism

Peace of Paris

self-determination

Society for the

Colonization of Israel

stab in the back

The Great Powers

The Great War

Treaty of Versailles

trench warfare

Triple Alliance

Triple Entente

Tsar Nicholas II

Wafd party

Western front

Woodrow Wilson

Zionists

CHAPTER 29

Alexander Kerensky

Ba Jin

Bertrand Russell

Chiang Kai-shek

collectivization

Comintern

Communist Party

Congress of Soviets

corridos

Council of People’s

Commissars

Cristeros

cubist movement

descamisados

Diego Rivera

Emiliano Zapata

Eva Duarte

Fascism

Francisco Franco

Francisco Madero

Guomindang

Henry Ford

indigenism

Interwar Period

John Dewey

Joseph Stalin

Kellogg-Briand Pact

Korekiyo Takahashi

Lázaro Cárdenas

Lenin

Long March

Mao Zedong

Mariano Azuela

May Fourth Movement

Mexican Constitution of

1917

Mexican Revolution

MVD

New Economic Policy

Pablo Picasso

Pancho Villa

PRI

Puyi

Red Army

Red Scare

Revolutionary Alliance

Roaring Twenties

Russian Revolution of

settler societies

Sun Yat-sen

syndicalism

Twenty-One Demands

U.S.S.R.

Vladimir Lenin

zaibatsu

CHAPTER 30

Afrikaner National Party

Algeria

apartheid

Atlantic Charter

Axis powers

Battle of Britain

Battle of Coral Sea

Battle of Stalingrad

Battle of the Bulge

blitzkrieg

Cold War

Dwight Eisenhower

Erwin Rommel

Final Solution

Franklin Roosevelt

Ghana

Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Holocaust

Indian National Congress

Jomo Kenyatta

Kenya African Union

Kwame Nkrumah

Land Freedom Army

Manchukuo

Manchuria

Midway Island

Mohandas Gandhi

Muhammad Ali Jinnah

Muslim League

National Socialist Party

Neville Chamberlain

Nonaggression pact

OAS

Potsdam Conference

Quit India Movement

South Africa

Stafford Cripps

Tehran Conference

total war

Tripartite Pact

United Nations

Vichy

Wannsee Conference

Wehrmacht

Winston Churchill

World Court of Justice

Yalta Conference

Yamamoto