How were Leni Riefenstahl’s films about Nazi Germany viewed abroad?
a) While admiring her talent as a filmmaker, many worried that her skill as a propagandist might encourage foreign support for the Nazis.
b) Many discounted her films as unworthy, mainly because they were made by a woman.
Consider This: Although she lived to 101, Riefenstahl was boycotted and denounced for her work until the end of her life. See 12.6: Narrative: Hitler’s Director.
c) Riefenstahl’s films were admired and emulated throughout Allied territory, with filmmakers borrowing her best techniques.
Consider This: Although she lived to 101, Riefenstahl was boycotted and denounced for her work until the end of her life. See 12.6: Narrative: Hitler’s Director.
d) Riefenstahl’s films were confiscated and the negatives were destroyed whenever possible to keep her work from becoming more widely known.
Consider This: Although she lived to 101, Riefenstahl was boycotted and denounced for her work until the end of her life. See 12.6: Narrative: Hitler’s Director.
a) While admiring her talent as a filmmaker, many worried that her skill as a propagandist might encourage foreign support for the Nazis.
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The Revolution of 1830 in France resulted in
a. a constitutional monarchy with strong ties to the upper bourgeoisie. b. the nearly twenty-year rule of Louis Philippe. c. lingering resentment among Parisian workers who had fought the revolution but gained essentially nothing in return. d. sparking revolutions in Belgium, Poland, and Italy. e. all of the above
Discuss the international economic policies of the United States from 1918 to the beginning of the Great Depression, and explain why those policies failed to sustain a healthy world economy.
What will be an ideal response?
?Blitzkrieg? in World War II meant
A) fixed, emplaced trench warfare. B) aerial reconnaissance. C) massive, mobile, mechanized movements. D) code breaking. E) joint naval and land attacks.
The Russian zemstvos were
A) radical, populist societies that supported all revolutionary causes. B) local assemblies with limited self-governing powers. C) agreements between peasants and landlords concerning work rules. D) the emancipation proclamations that set groups of serfs free. E) Russia's two national parliaments, one in Moscow and the other in St. Petersburg.