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