sábado, 1 de mayo de 2010

Treaty of Versailles














The Treaty of Versailles (click here for text and explanations) was the peace settlement signed after World War One had ended in 1918 and in the shadow of the Russian Revolution and other events in Russia. The treaty was signed at the vast Versailles Palace near Paris - hence its title - between Germany and the Allies. The three most important politicians there were David Lloyd George, Georges Clemenceau and Woodrow Wilson. The Versailles Palace was considered the most appropriate venue simply because of its size - many hundreds of people were involved in the process and the final signing ceremony in the Hall of Mirrors could accommodate hundreds of dignitaries. Many wanted Germany, now led by Friedrich Ebert, smashed - others, like Lloyd George, were privately more cautious.
The treaty was signed on June 28th 1919 after months of argument and negotiation amongst the so-called "Big Three" as to what the treaty should contain.

Who were the "Big Three" and where did they clash over Germany and her treatment after the war ?

The "Big Three" were David Lloyd George of Britain, Clemenceau of France and Woodrow Wilson of America.

The terms of the Treaty of Versailles

The treaty can be divided into a number of sections; territorial, military, financial and general.

Territorial

The following land was taken away from Germany :

Alsace-Lorraine (given to France)

Eupen and Malmedy (given to Belgium)

Northern Schleswig (given to Denmark)

Hultschin (given to Czechoslovakia)

West Prussia, Posen and Upper Silesia (given to Poland)

The Saar, Danzig and Memel were put under the control of the League of Nations and the people of these regions would be allowed to vote to stay in Germany or not in a future referendum.

The League of Nations also took control of Germany's overseas colonies.
Germany had to return to Russia land taken in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. Some of this land was made into new states : Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia. An enlarged Poland also received some of this land.

Military

Germany’s army was reduced to 100,000 men; the army was not allowed tanks
She was not allowed an airforce She was allowed only 6 capital naval ships and no submarines The west of the Rhineland and 50 kms east of the River Rhine was made into a demilitarised zone (DMZ). No German soldier or weapon was allowed into this zone. The Allies were to keep an army of occupation on the west bank of the Rhine for 15 years.

Financial

The loss of vital industrial territory would be a severe blow to any attempts by Germany to rebuild her economy. Coal from the Saar and Upper Silesia in particular was a vital economic loss. Combined with the financial penalties linked to reparations, it seemed clear to Germany that the Allies wanted nothing else but to bankrupt her.
Germany was also forbidden to unite with Austria to form one superstate, in an attempt to keep her economic potential to a minimum.

General

There are three vital clauses here:

1. Germany had to admit full responsibility for starting the war. This was Clause 231 - the infamous "War Guilt Clause".

2. Germany, as she was responsible for starting the war as stated in clause 231, was, therefore responsible for all the war damage caused by the First World War. Therefore, she had to pay reparations, the bulk of which would go to France and Belgium to pay for the damage done to the infrastructure of both countries by the war. Quite literally, reparations would be used to pay for the damage to be repaired. Payment could be in kind or cash. The figure was not set at Versailles - it was to be determined later. The Germans were told to write a blank cheque which the Allies would cash when it suited them. The figure was eventually put at £6,600 million - a huge sum of money well beyond Germany’s ability to pay.

3. A League of Nations was set up to keep world peace.

In fact, the first 26 clauses of the treaty dealt with the League's organisation.


The German reaction to the Treaty of Versailles

After agreeing to the Armistice in November 1918, the Germans had been convinced that they would be consulted by the Allies on the contents of the Treaty. This did not happen and the Germans were in no position to continue the war as her army had all but disintegrated. Though this lack of consultation angered them, there was nothing they could do about it. Therefore, the first time that the German representatives saw the terms of the Treaty was just weeks before they were due to sign it in the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles on June 28th 1919.

There was anger throughout Germany when the terms were made public. The Treaty became known as a Diktat - as it was being forced on them and the Germans had no choice but to sign it. Many in Germany did not want the Treaty signed, but the representatives there knew that they had no choice as German was incapable of restarting the war again.

In one last gesture of defiance, the captured German naval force held at Scapa Flow (north of Scotland) scuttled itself i.e. deliberately sank itself.

Germany was given two choices:

1) sign the Treaty or
2) be invaded by the Allies.

They signed the Treaty as in reality they had no choice. When the ceremony was over, Clemenceau went out into the gardens of Versailles and said "It is a beautiful day".

The consequences of Versailles

The Treaty seemed to satisfy the "Big Three" as in their eyes it was a just peace as it kept Germany weak yet strong enough to stop the spread of communism; kept the French border with Germany safe from another German attack and created the organisation, the League of Nations, that would end warfare throughout the world.
However, it left a mood of anger throughout Germany as it was felt that as a nation Germany had been unfairly treated.
Above all else, Germany hated the clause blaming her for the cause of the war and the resultant financial penalties the treaty was bound to impose on Germany. Those who signed it (though effectively they had no choice) became known as the "November Criminals".
Many German citizens felt that they were being punished for the mistakes of the German government in August 1914 as it was the government that had declared war not the people.

World War I & The War Poets


The Web provides us with good resources to study about WWI.

PPPs about the WWI: Reality of war,WWI,WWI(2),WWI(3).

Photo Archives: WWI Image Archives; Trenches on the Web

WWI timeline

About the War Poets:

PPP , click here to download: Wilfred Owen and Rupert Brooke


Manuscript of "Dulce et Decorum est"




About Owen´s poem "Dulce et Decorum Est" and here. Audio of the poem, here.

Jessie Pope´s "The Call"

A slideshow with audio of the poem

Another Presentation by Alice



Alice made a great presentation on Multicultural and Contemporary and Post colonial Literature for Lengua y Cultura I but it is a subject we´ll be dealing next term so here is the link to her PPP.

miércoles, 14 de abril de 2010

Alice in La Plata


Alice Roughton, Language Assistant with the British Council has visited our class. She introduced us to her country and the cultural diversity that means living in modern UK. She also made some key concepts very clear. Her natural warm ways and the good will she showed for our questions and curiosity made it an excellent moment to share knowledge and friendship.
Here is the PPP she made for us with key concepts to understand UK´s culture better.
Luckily for us, next week she will visit us with a talk on the "War Poets".
Thanks, Alice!!!

Welcome!!!

Welcome students of 2nd Year!! Here you´ll find material or extra material of our subject or suggestions for further reading. Search the archives and you´ll find material we´ve been working with.

domingo, 31 de enero de 2010

JD Salinger's death sparks speculation over unpublished manuscripts

JD Salinger, the notoriously reclusive author, gave Tom Leonard a chilly reception in New Hampshire, where rumours are swirling over his unpublished manuscripts following his death.

JD Salinger was standing at the kitchen window when I called at his remote farmhouse in the hills of New Hampshire almost exactly a year ago.

He had just turned 90 and the question as to whether his famous reclusiveness might finally have "mellowed with age" had proven irresistible.


It had not, although his outburst upon seeing me - it sounded like "Oh, no!" - was possibly his last, and strangely fitting, remark to the media.

He was replaced at the window by his wife, Colleen, an attractive blonde who was 40 years his junior. We chatted briefly about my journey up there - she somehow knew my car had got stuck in the snow the previous night - before politely informing me, with apologies for a wasted trip, that the author's desire for privacy was not about to end now. So goodbye.

In an email to the local newsletter on Thursday, one day after he died at the age of 91, Mrs Salinger thanked her neighbours in the 1,600-strong community of Cornish for the "protective envelope" they gave her husband after he moved there in 1953, adding that she hoped they would continue to do the same for her.

She is not wrong in speculating that the interest in the Salinger household is unlikely to wither with her husband's death.

It is more likely to grow as Salinger watchers look for answers to the great mystery of his later years: what lies in his safe, waiting to be published.

A former girlfriend said Salinger, who last had a book published in 1963, wrote regularly every morning and that she had seen manuscripts of two finished novels and stacks of full notebooks. A neighbour said Salinger, who once admitted he wrote simply for writing's sake, had told him he had written 15 unpublished novels.

The author's daughter, Margaret, said he kept a detailed filing system of his writing, with red marks for work that could be published "as is" and blue for copy that needed editing.

Some question whether any of it will be worth publishing. The novelist Jay McInerny said he feared it might be like Salinger's last published piece - a 1965 short story for the New Yorker magazine - which he described as "an insane epistolary monologue, virtually shapeless and formless".

Salinger's literary representatives have so far said nothing but disagreements between Margaret and her brother, Matt, are unlikely to expedite matters. The latter attacked his sister's memoir, in which she revealed that their father drank his own urine, spoke in tongues and had a frightening control over their mother, insisting that he "grew up in a very different house".

Predictably, the writer's neighbours have little to contribute on the literary mystery. Salinger continued to appear around town - at the supermarket, the library and the local coffee shop - but there was a strict understanding that nobody was to acknowledge his fame.

In return for the town's protectiveness, Salinger would invite high school pupils to his house once a week, according to a local restaurant waitress.

But when I visited, the code of silence was clearly disintegrating, with neighbours happy to supply anecdotes and theories about "JD". He was - it was commonly agreed - respected rather than liked. Local tolerance for his famous brusqueness was clearly wearing thin.

As for socialising, the only event he appeared still to patronise regularly in later years was a monthly turkey dinner at the local Universalist Unitarian church - a multi-religion denomination which would have appealed to a man who tried out various faiths.

"Nobody is supposed to acknowledge that he's there. You just treat him like he's just another normal person," said Kay Cavendish, a regular church goer.

Robert Dean, who runs Salinger's favourite café, confirmed that even the locals had to be careful how they treated him.

"The rule is that if you have to talk to him, make sure you never acknowledge that he is famous," he said. "If you see him, you know not to talk to him unless he talks to you. He's not one for chitchat."

To read The Catcher in the Rye

To read about more him


source./www.telegraph.co.uk//wikipedia.org

Andy Warhol, Mr America


More about Andy Warhol. You can see part of his work in MALBA, Buenos Aires. For more info, click here.

To enlarge and read, click images:









Taken from the information leaflet given in the exhibition. To know more about Mr Warhol,

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts