Source List for IS 124 Reader

Work #1 – Lives and Voices: Sources in European Women’s History, edited by Lisa DiCaprio and Merry E. Wiesner; ISBN 0-395-97052-0; Houghton Mifflin, 2001.

Chapter names: (a)Selection 158. “God, Work, Family, and Fatherland” pp. 502-504 (3 pages); (b) Selection 165, “Leaflets of the White Rose” pp. 526-529 (4 pages); (c) Selection 185, “Women in Black Against War” pp. 619-623 (5 pages). The book has a total of 633 pages.

Work #2 – Eastern European Nationalism in the 20th Century, edited by Peter Sugar; ISBN 1-879383-39-X; American University Press, 1995.

Chapter names:(a) “The Yugoslav Peoples” Document 2, pp.309-316 (8 pages); (b) “Nationalism, The Victorious Ideology” pp. 413-429 (17 pages). The book has a total of 456 pages.

Work #3 – --

Chapter name: “English Identity” by Ann Leslie

Work #4 – --

Chapter name: “An Essay on the Duties of Man Addressed to Workingmen” By Joseph Mazzini

Work #5 – --

Chapter name: “Josiah Strong on Anglo-Saxon Predominance, 1891

Work #6 – --

Chapter name: “Holocaust Timeline” [speech by Heinrich Himmler]

Work #7 – --

Chapter name: “What is Nationalism – Definitions?” -- Selections from Benedict Anderson, Ernest Gellner, Ernest Renan, Rogers Brubaker, and Michael Hechter

Work #8 – --

Chapter names: (a)“Nationalism” – Selections from Voltaire, Johann Gottfried von Herder, Richard Price, Prince Ukhtomskii, Johann Gottlieb Fichte (2 selections), Giuseppe Mazzini, Daniel O’Connell, Theodor Herzl, Proclamation of the Irish Republic, Max Schneckenburger, and Ernst Morits Arndt (b) “Fascism” – Selection from Benito Mussolini (c) “Holocaust” – Selections from Hermann Friedrich Graebe and Rudolph Hoess (d) “The Cold War” – Selections from Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin

Work #9 – Nationalism, edited by John Hutchinson & Anthony D. Smith; ISBN 0-19-289260-6; Oxford University Press, 1994.

Chapter names: (a) “The Nation” by Joseph Stalin, pp.18-21 (4 pages); (b) “The Nation” by Max Weber, pp.21-25 (5 pages); (c) “The Nation as Invented Tradition” by Eric Hobsbawm, pp.76-83 (8 pages); (d) “Introduction” by John Hutchinson and Anthony Smith, pp. 3-13 (11 pages). The book has a total of 378 pages.

Work#10 – Classics of Western Thought: Volume III, The Modern World, edited by Edgar Knoebel, 3rd edition; ISBN0-15-507680-9; Harcourt, 1980.

Chapter name: “Mein Kampf” by Adolph Hitler, pp.562-578 (17 pages). The book has a total of 666 pages.

Work #11 – Sources of the West, Vol. II, edited by Mark A. Kishlansky, 4th edition; ISBN 0-321-07718-0; Addison Wesley Longman, 2001.

Chapter names: (a)“How to Read a Document,” pp. xiii – xxii (10 pages); (b) “Report on the Fall of Srebenica” by Kofi Annan, pp. 342-350 (9 pages). This book has a total of 379 pages.

Work #12 – Aspects of Western Civilization, Vol. II, edited by Perry M. Rogers, 4th edition; ISBN 0-13-083203-0; Prentice Hall, 2000.

Chapter names: (a) “Arts and Ideas” -- selections from Lord Byron and Francisco Goya, pp. 156-159 (4 pages); (b) “Proclamation for the Liberation of Sicily” by Giuseppe Garibaldi and “Address to Parliament” by King Victor Emmanuel, pp. 213-215 (3 pages); (c) “We Germans Fear God and Naught Else in the World” by Otto Von Bismarck, pp. 217-220 (4 pages); (d) “The White Man’s Burden” by Rudyard Kipling and “A Natural Inclination to Submit to a Higher Authority” by Sir Frederick Dealtry Lugard, pp. 233-236 (4 pages); (e) “Nationalists, Socialists, and Jews” by Joseph Goebbels, pp. 385-387 (3 pages); (f) “Fiftieth Anniversary of D-Day” by Bill Clinton, pp.447-450 (4 pages); (g) “‘A World Turned Upside Down’: The Gorbachev Era and Beyond” – selections from Mikhail Gorbachev (two) and Boris Yeltsin, pp. 529-538 (10 pages); (h) “The Future of Europe” – selections from Helmut Kohl, Francois Mitterand, Vaclav Havel, Helmut Tuerk, and Pope John Paul II, pp.541-551 (11 pages). This book has a total of 607 pages.

Work #13 – Anne Frank, The Diary of a Young Girl, Pocket Books of Doubleday, 1952. ISBN 0-671-70761-2

Chapter name: letters on pp. 47-50, 238-243 (10 pages). This book has a total of 243 pages.

Work #14 – David Bell, The Cult of the Nation in France, HarvardUniversity Press, 2001. ISBN 0-674-00447-7

Chapter name: “Introduction,” pp. 1-21 (21 pages). This book has a total of 304 pages.

Work #15 – The Western Tradition, Vol. II, edited by Eugen Weber, 4th ed.; ISBN 0-669-20147-2; D.C. Heath, 1990.

Chapter names: (a) “German Attitudes” by A. Wirth, pp.733-735 (3 pages); (b) “The Fourteen Points,” pp. 749-750 (2 pages); (c) “The Treaty of Versailles,” pp.751-753 (3 pages). This book has a total of 645 pages.

Work #16 – Sources of Twentieth-Century Global History, edited by JamesH.Overfield; ISBN 0-395-90407-2; Houghton Mifflin, 2002.

Chapter names: (a) “The Peace that Failed,” pp. 98-102 (5 pages); (b) “Unrest in Eastern Europe and Soviet Response,” pp. 322-328 (7 pages); (c) “Ethnic Hatred and Racial Reconciliation,” pp. 440-445 (6 pages). This book has a total of 476 pages.

Work #17 – --

Chapter name: “Self-Determination Conflict Profile: Bosnia-Herzegovina” by Roberto Belloni

Work #18 – Jay Winter, Remembering War: The Great War Between Memory and History in the Twentieth Century; ISBN 0-300-11068-5; Yale University Press, 2006.

Chapter name: (a) “Introduction”, pp. 1-13 (13 pages); (b) Chapter One, “The Setting,”pp. 17-51 (35 pages). This book has a total of 340 pages.

Work #19 – Franklin Foer, How Soccer Explains the World, ISBN 0-06-073142-7; HarperCollins, 2005.

Chapter name: Chapter Eight, “How Soccer Explains the Discreet Charm of Bourgeois Nationalism,” pp. 193-216 (24 pages). This book has a total of 261 pages.

Work #20 – George Weigel, The Final Revolution: The ResistanceChurch and the Collapse of Communism, ISBN 0-19-507160; OxfordUniversity Press, 1992.

Chapter name: (a) Chapter Five, “Poland: Igniting the Revolution,” pp. 103-58 (59 pages); (b) Chapter One, “Not by Politics Alone,” pp. 15-35 (21 pages). This book has a total of 255 pages.

Work #21 – –

Chapter name: Theological Declaration of Barmen

Work #22 – –

Chapter name: Martin Niemöller

Work #23 – Eerdman’s Handbook to the History of Christianity, ed. Tim Dowley; ISBN 0-8028-3450-7; Eerdman’s, 1977.

Chapter name: Dietrich Bonhoeffer, p. 603 (1 page). This book has a total of 656 pages.

Work #24 – James E. Young, At Memory’s Edge: After-Images of the Holocaust in Contemporary Art and Architecture, ISBN 0-300-08032-8; Yale University Press, 2000.

Chapter name: Chapter Seven, “Germany’s Holocaust Memorial Problem – and Mine,” pp. 184-223 (40 pages). This book has a total of 256 pages.

Work #25 – Kevin Reilly, Worlds of History, Vol. II, 2nd ed., ISBN 0-312-40202-3; Bedford /St. Martins, 2004.

Chapter name: Chapter Ten “World War and Its Consequnces,” selection 59 – Wilfred Owen, “Dulce et Decorum Est,” pp. 376-77 (2 pages). This book has a total of 558 pages.

Work #26 – Jay Winter, “Unfriendly Fire,” Times Literary Supplement, June 14, 2006.

Work #27 – –

Chapter name: “Be Ye Men of Valour”

Work #28 – Michael Bess, Choices Under Fire: Moral Dimensions of World War II, ISBN 0-307-26365-7; Alfred A. Knopf, 2006.

Chapter name: Chapter Thirteen, “The Politics of Memory,” pp. 309-35 (27 pages). This book has a total of 415 pages.

Work #29 – F. Stephen Larrabee, “Danger and Opportunity in Eastern Europe,” Foreign Affairs, 85 (Nov/Dec 2006): 117-31.

Work #30 – Ian Buruma, “Ghosts of the Holocaust,” Los Angeles Times, June 3, 2007, page M8.

Work #31 – Karl Fuchs, Your Loyal and Loving Son: the Letters of Tank Gunner Karl Fuchs, 1937-1941, ISBN 1574885677; Brassey’s, 2003.

Chapter name: Selected letters totaling 8 pages. This book has a total of 170 pages.