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Fighting the Good Fight?

Fighting the Good Fight?. Challenging the traditional “Good vs. Evil” narrative of World War II. “The Good Fight”. World War II is seen in the western countries as a just and moral battle The Allies deserved to win because they were standing up to evil

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Fighting the Good Fight?

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  1. Fighting the Good Fight? Challenging the traditional “Good vs. Evil” narrative of World War II

  2. “The Good Fight” • World War II is seen in the western countries as a just and moral battle • The Allies deserved to win because they were standing up to evil • This narrative begins with the war itself (common technique in propaganda) • Easy to support because the Axis’ atrocities are well documented

  3. The Big Questions • Is there such a thing as a moral war??? • Even by wartime standards, do the Allies really deserve to be considered morally righteous?

  4. Allied “Black Marks” • Atomic Bombs • Stalin’s Crimes • The Japanese Internment • Racism • Firebombings • Civilian Casualties

  5. Review – The Atomic Bombs • Dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan; August 6 & 8, 1945 • Directly caused (at the ABSOLUTE minimum) 225,000 deaths plus countless mutations and other wide reaching health effects • Justification offered: Alternative was invasion of Japan which would have cost 2 million+ lives • Also used as a statement towards the USSR – post-war posturing

  6. Stalin’s Soviet Union: Full of Evil • Stalin’s “Great Purge” in the late 1930s involved the executions of as many as 700,000 political opponents • The Purge also involved over a million others being exiled to “gulags” (prison camps) in Siberia (30,000 Jews) • Stalin fabricates the “Doctor’s Plot” in 1952 • Dies before it can be turned into a genocide

  7. Our Own Prison Camps:The Japanese Internment

  8. Civilians of Japanese descent were forced to relocate to internment camps in both Canada and the United States • Forced to evacuate on short notice • Government re-sold houses and belongings and kept profits • In Canada, people of Japanese descent were not allowed west of the Rockies until 1950 (five full years after war ends) • In total, ~30,000 Japanese-Canadians and ~110,000 Japanese Americans were interned

  9. PNE Forum – Hastings Park, Vancouver Where is this???

  10. Racism in Propaganda • Racism was widespread against the Japanese in the war • The internment reflects this • We also see very strong racism in American propaganda towards the Japanese • Often portrayed as subhuman • Imitations of “Engrish” • Comical looking caricatures

  11. Terror Bombings • The British Bomber Command was launched to carry out bombing attacks on German cities in retaliation for the bombing of London • Very controversial, targeted cities (i.e. civilian areas) • Notable attacks on Hamburg (1943) and Dresden (1945) • Often used incendiary bombs to maximize damage • Later used as a demonstration of power to the USSR

  12. Dresden (February 1945) • Dresden was a medieval cultural center known for its architecture and the arts • Became a major refugee haven with the Soviets advancing • No targets of any strategic value • War is already all but over • City’s population: 350,000 + countless refugees

  13. The Firestorm • RAF and RCAF Lancaster bombers • USAF B-17 Flying Fortresses (Heavy bombers) • Over 3,300 tonnes of bombs dropped • 1,300 bombs total, mostly incendiary • Created a “firestorm” in the city

  14. Description of the Firestorm • “Many of the bombs that were dropped were incendiary bombs. These created so much fire that a firestorm developed. The more the city burned, the more oxygen was sucked in – and the greater the firestorm became. It is thought that the temperature peaked at 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit. The surface of roads melted and fleeing people found that their feet were burned as they ran. Some jumped into reservoirs built in the city centre to assist firefighters. However, these were ten feet deep, smooth-sided and had no ladders - many drowned. Very few of those in the city centre survived.” • (Source)

  15. Survivor Account • "Apart from the fire risk, it was becoming increasingly impossible to breath in the cellar because the air was being pulled out by the increasing strength of the blaze." • "We could not stand up, we were on all fours, crawling. the wind was full of sparks and carrying bits of blazing furniture, debris and burning bits of bodies." • "There were charred bodies everywhere."

  16. Results • Over 100,000 dead (almost entirely civilians) • Disposal of the bodies took almost 2 weeks to complete • The entire city centre flattened (not rebuilt until almost 20 years later)

  17. Civilian Casualties • WWII became the war of civilian casualties. While Hitler is largely blamed for this becoming a theme, the Allies inflicted their share as well (Allied civ. Casualties: 25.4M)

  18. Further Reading on Topic • “Moral Combat” – by Michael Burleigh • Addresses the debate of the moral high ground in the war • Review available online

  19. Critical Writing Assignment • Was the use of the atomic bomb justified? (is it ever?) (shorter, point form allowed) • Do you believe it is valid to characterize the war as a clash of good versus evil? Why or why not? (i.e. how do you define the moral standing of each side?) (longer, must be in paragraph form) • Both due tomorrow…/15

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