Assignment 6 Semester 1 2026
Unique number:
Due Date: 13 May 2026
TOPIC 1
Introduction
The outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 cannot be understood without examining
Germany’s social, economic, and political experiences during the inter-war years. After the
First World War, Germany faced severe instability caused by the Treaty of Versailles,
economic collapse, political fragmentation, and social unrest.
OR
TOPIC 2
Introduction
Japan and the Chinese People’s Republic followed different economic paths after the
Second World War, but both show that the line between managed markets and neo-liberal
markets was not always clear. Japan rebuilt its economy under strong state direction, close
links between government and business, export planning, protected industries and support
from the United States during the Cold War.1 This made Japan a clear example of a
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TOPIC 1
Introduction
The outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 cannot be understood without
examining Germany’s social, economic, and political experiences during the inter-
war years. After the First World War, Germany faced severe instability caused by the
Treaty of Versailles, economic collapse, political fragmentation, and social unrest.
These conditions created widespread dissatisfaction among ordinary Germans and
weakened confidence in the democratic Weimar Republic. Historians such as Jill
Stephenson argue through the concept of Sonderweg that Germany followed a
unique historical path that contributed to the rise of Nazism and ultimately to war.1
The inter-war period exposed deep divisions within German society, where
conservative elites, industrialists, and nationalist groups increasingly rejected
democratic politics and supported authoritarian solutions. Economic crises such as
hyperinflation in 1923 and the Great Depression after 1929 intensified
2
unemployment, poverty, and political extremism. Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party
exploited these conditions by promising national recovery, economic stability, and
the reversal of the humiliation caused by Versailles. At the same time, weaknesses
within the Weimar political system allowed anti-democratic forces to gain influence.
This essay argues that Germany’s inter-war experiences played a major role in
causing the Second World War because economic suffering, political instability, and
nationalist ideology created conditions that enabled the Nazi regime to rise to power
and pursue aggressive expansionist policies.3
Annotated Bibliography
1. Jill Stephenson, ‘The Rise of the Nazis: Sonderweg or Spanner in the
Works?’ in Mary Fulbrook (ed), German History since 1800 (Hodder Education
1997) 298–319.
1
Jill Stephenson, ‘The Rise of the Nazis: Sonderweg or Spanner in the Works?’ in Mary Fulbrook (ed), German
History since 1800 (Hodder Education 1997) 298.
2
Niall Ferguson, ‘The German Inter-war Economy: Political Choice versus Economic Determinism’ in Mary
Fulbrook (ed), German History since 1800 (Hodder Education 1997) 260–263.
3
Richard Bessel, ‘Germany from War to Dictatorship’ in Mary Fulbrook (ed), German History since 1800
(Hodder Education 1997) 235–240.