Ch. 9.1

1. industrialization

2. crop rotation

3. cotton gin

4. how rising population helped industrialization

5. entrepreneur

6. how agricultural revolution helped the industrial revolution

7. how railroads helped the industrial revolution

Ch. 9.3

1. stocks & corporations

2. industrialization shifting the balance of power in the world

3. industrialization shifting the balance of power within societies

4. transformation of Western society

5. foibles of industrialization

Ch. 9.4

1. Adam Smith

2. laissez-faire economics

3. Capitalism vs. Communism vs. Socialism

4. Karl Marx

5. bourgeoisie vs. proletariat

6. unions & strikes

9. Jane Addams

10. why "dictatorship of the proletariat" failed

Ch. 10.3

1. manifest destiny

2. Jackson & the Trail of Tears

3. Texas War for Independence

4. the Mexican-American War

5. how Mexican Cession lead to Civil War

6. Abraham Lincoln's election and the beginning of the Civil War

7. causes of the Civil War

8. benefits of the North over the South

9. benefits of the South over the North

10. “Anaconda” Plan

11. Emancipation Proclamation

12. How the Emancipation Proclamation was PR

13. the 13th, 14th, and 15thAmmendments

14. how fight over slavery was not merely moral, but also economic

15. Reconstruction

Ch. 10.4

1. Thomas Edison's influence

2. Alexander Graham Bell's influence

3. Henry Ford's influence

4. assembly line

5. Joseph Lister and Germ Theory

6. Darwin's influence

7. Social Darwinism

8. theory of evolution

9. radioactivity

10. Freud's influence

11. psychology

12. mass culture

Ch. 11.5

1. imperialism

2. Emilio Aguinaldo

3. Queen Liliukalani

4. U.S. in the Pacific

5. Spanish-American War

Ch. 12

1. Taiping Rebellion vs. Boxer Rebellion

2. Japan as a feudal society

3. Chinese response to the West vs. Japanese response

4. How the British established trade with China: Opium

5. How the Americans established trade with Japan: Commodore Perry

6. imperialism nationalism connect to racism

7. “A man, a plan, a canal, Panama.”

8. How U.S. got the Panama Canal

9. Pancho Villa & Emiliano Zapata

10. Why Texans revolted against Mexico

11. “Remember the Alamo”

12. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

13. Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine

14. U.S.S. Maine & Yellow Journalism

15. American gains after Spanish-American War

Ch. 13.1

1. Kaiser Wilhelm IImilitarism

2. Archduke Franz FerdinandGavrilo Princip

3. Austria’s response to Ferdinand’s assassination

4. Serbia’s response to Austria’s demands

5. Turkish response to Armenian support of the Allies

Ch. 13.2

1. Central Powers

2. Allies

3. Western Front vs. Eastern Front

4. Schlieffen Plan

5. trench warfare

6. New Weapons of War

Ch. 13.3

1. how Woodrow Wilson got elected

2. sinking of the Lusitania & unrestricted submarine warfare

3. Zimmerman Telegram

4. total war

5. Spanish Flu death toll

6. Russian withdrawal from WWI

7. Vladimir Lenin and the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

8. armisticeVeteran’s Day

9. women during the war and after the war

Ch. 13.4

1. Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points & self-determination

2. Georges Clemenceau

3. self-determination within 14 Points

4. Treaty of Versailles & causes for WWII

5. League of Nations and the U.S.

Ch. 14.1

1. “long fuse” of Russia

2. Karl Marx & Russian Communism

3. Tsar Nicholas II

4. Russia during Russo-Japanese War and during WWI

5. Bloody Sunday

6. the Duma

7. Rasputin and the Tsarina

8. Fall of Romanov Dynasty

9. Revolution of 1917 and the Provisional Government

10. soviets

11. Mensheviks vs. Bolsheviks

12. Bolshevik Revolution and Vladimir Lenin

13. Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

14. White Army vs. Red Army

15. Rise of Stalin

Ch. 14.2

1. totalitarianism

2. indoctrination, propaganda, and censorship

3. Stalin’s early life

4. Stalin’s paranoia and the Great Purge

5. command economy and Five-Year Plans

6. changes for women under Stalin

7. changes for Russia under Stalin

Ch. 14.3

1. Kuomintang, Sun Yixuan, and Jiang Jieshi

2. Reasons and Results for May Fourth Movement

3. Mao Zedong and Chinese Communism

4. Long March

5. Mao’s Communism vs. Lenin’s Communism

Sec. 14.4

1. Rowlatt ActsAmritsar Massacre

2. Mohandas Gandhimeaning of “Mahatma”

3. civil disobedience and the Salt March

Ch. 15.1

1. Albert EinsteinTheory of Relativity

2. Sigmund Freud,psychoanalysis, & id, ego, and superego

3. existentialism

4. Friedrich Nietzsche and Übermensch

5. jazz as post-modern

6. reasons for postmodernism

7. suffrage for women

8. rise of mass entertainment

9. automobile alters society

10. why women wanted more rights

Sec. 15.2

1. Weimar Republic’s weaknesses

2. Great Depression: overproduction in agriculture, buying on margin, the Dust Bowl, and Black Tuesday

3. FDR’s New Deal: Social Security, Medicare, FDIC

Sec. 15.3

1. fascismNazism

2. Mussolini “Il Duce”Adolf Hitler “The Führer”

3. how Hitler maintained powerStorm Troopers

4. Mein Kampf andlebensraum

5. anti-Semitism

Ch. 15.4

1. Japanese, Italian, and German invasions

2. Hitler defies Treaty of Versailles

3. Chamberlain &appeasement

4. Axis Powers

5. American Isolationism

6. Chamberlain vs. Churchill

Ch. 16.1

1. Hitler’s tactics: blitzkrieg

2. nonaggression pact with U.S.S.R.

3. Churchill’s leadership & the Battle of Britain

4. Charles de Gaulle & Dunkirk

5. Erwin Rommel & Africa

6. Roosevelt and the Atlantic Charter

7. Hitler & Napoleon’s invasion of Russia

8. Germany situated well for invasion of Europe

Ch. 16.2

1. Yamamoto & Pearl Harbor

2. Why Pearl Harbor was attacked

3. Japanese vs. Americans in the Pacific: Philippines, Midway, Guadalcanal.

4. Douglas MacArthur and Island-hopping

Ch. 16.3

1. Herschel Grynspan and the Kristallnacht

2. Aryans

3. Holocaust; “Final Solution”; genocide

4. ghettos

Ch. 16.4

1. Eisenhower vs. Rommel in North Africa

2. Battle of Stalingrad

3. Invasion of Italy and Death of Mussolini

4. Japanese Internment Camps

5. D-Day Invasion / Operation Overlord

6. Battle of the Bulge

7. V-E Day

8. kamikazes

9. Iwo Jima: why U.S. did NOT want to invade Japan

10. Truman’s choice to use the A-Bomb

11. The Manhattan Project, and the A-Bomb

12. Oppenheimer’s comment on A-Bomb

Ch. 16.5

1. Nuremberg Trials

2. demilitarization of Japan and Germany

3. democratization of Japan

4. the beginning of the Cold War