VIC · VCAAQ&A
Modern HistoryQ&A by dot point
A short Q&A bank for every VIC Modern History syllabus dot point. Each question and answer is drawn directly from our worked dot-point page, so you can scan key concepts before opening the long-form answer.
Unit 1: Change and conflict (1918 to 1939)
- the rise and consolidation of authoritarian regimes, including Mussolini's Italy (1922 to 1939) and Hitler's Germany (1933 to 1939), covering the seizure of power, the dismantling of constitutional government, and the construction of one-party rule5Q&A pairs
- The challenges facing democratic states in the 1920s, including the Weimar Republic in Germany, post-war Britain and France, the United States in the 'Roaring Twenties', and the changing role of women14Q&A pairs
- the collapse of collective security and the events that led to WWII, including Manchuria (1931), Abyssinia (1935), the Rhineland (1936), the Spanish Civil War (1936 to 1939), Anschluss (1938), Munich (1938), and the invasion of Poland (1939)8Q&A pairs
- the consequences of WWI, including the collapse of empires, the Treaty of Versailles (June 1919), the League of Nations, and the political and economic instability of the immediate post-war period11Q&A pairs
- Analyse the early stages of WWII in Europe (1939-1941), including the invasion of Poland, the fall of France (May-June 1940), the Battle of Britain (July-October 1940), and Operation Barbarossa (June 1941)8Q&A pairs
- Analyse the global impact of the Great Depression on democratic and authoritarian regimes, including its origins (Wall Street Crash 1929), its effects on Germany, the United States, Britain and Australia, and its role in producing the political polarisation of the 1930s12Q&A pairs
- The impact of WWI on Europe, the collapse of empires, the Treaty of Versailles (June 1919) and the post-war territorial and political settlement15Q&A pairs
- Analyse Mussolini's rise to power (March on Rome 1922) and the establishment of the Fascist state in Italy 1922-1939, including the use of violence, the corporate state, the Lateran Pacts (1929) and the invasion of Ethiopia (1935)14Q&A pairs
- Analyse the development of Japanese militarism between 1931 and 1941, including the invasion of Manchuria (1931), the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937), the Tripartite Pact (1940), and the attack on Pearl Harbor (December 1941)7Q&A pairs
- continuity and change in art, design, literature, music, cinema, radio and popular culture between 1918 and 1939, including modernism, mass media, jazz, Hollywood, and the use of culture by ideological regimes15Q&A pairs
- Analyse the consolidation of Nazi power in Germany 1933-1939, including the Reichstag Fire (February 1933), the Enabling Act (March 1933), the Night of the Long Knives (June 1934), the Nuremberg Laws (1935), the Four Year Plan (1936), and the path to war15Q&A pairs
- The rise and consolidation of authoritarian regimes in the 1930s (Nazi Germany from 1933, Stalinist USSR, militarist Japan), aggressive foreign policy, the failure of collective security, and the path to WWII15Q&A pairs
- the rise of ideologies in the interwar period, including fascism, Nazism, communism, and the appeal of authoritarianism over liberal democracy after WWI11Q&A pairs
- The rise of communism (Bolshevik Revolution 1917, Soviet Russia), fascism (Mussolini's March on Rome 1922), and Nazism (Hitler and the NSDAP), and the appeal of authoritarian and totalitarian ideologies in the interwar period15Q&A pairs
- Analyse the path to the Second World War, including German rearmament (1935), the remilitarisation of the Rhineland (1936), the Anschluss with Austria (March 1938), the Munich Agreement (September 1938), the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact (August 1939), and the British and French policy of appeasement5Q&A pairs
- social and cultural change in Stalin's USSR 1928 to 1939, including the First and Second Five-Year Plans, collectivisation, the Great Terror, socialist realism, the experience of women and workers, and the role of state propaganda3Q&A pairs
- Analyse the consolidation of Stalin's power and the transformation of Soviet society and economy through the Five-Year Plans (from 1928), collectivisation, and the Great Terror (1936-1938)11Q&A pairs
- Analyse the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) as an ideological proxy for the wider European conflict between fascism, communism and liberal democracy, including foreign intervention by Germany, Italy and the USSR, and the policy of non-intervention15Q&A pairs
- continuity and change in social and cultural life in Germany 1919 to 1939, including Weimar culture (Bauhaus, cabaret, expressionism, cinema, the New Woman) and the Nazi Gleichschaltung of culture, education and the family after 193315Q&A pairs
- Analyse the political, economic and social challenges faced by the Weimar Republic between 1918 and 1933, including the impact of the Treaty of Versailles, hyperinflation (1923), the Great Depression, and the political fragility that enabled the Nazi rise to power9Q&A pairs
- the experience of women between 1918 and 1939, including the expansion of suffrage, women's work and the New Woman, the reversal of gains under fascist and Nazi regimes, and women in Stalin's USSR and the United States6Q&A pairs
Unit 2: The changing world order (1945 to 2010)
- Challenges to the world order in the 21st century, including the September 11 attacks (2001), the War on Terror (Afghanistan 2001, Iraq 2003), the Global Financial Crisis (2007-2008), the rise of China, and the emergence of climate change as an international issue15Q&A pairs
- Challenges to existing orders in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, including the civil rights movement, second-wave feminism, decolonisation in Africa and Asia, the counterculture, and economic crises (oil shocks 1973 and 1979)7Q&A pairs
- Cold War crises in the era of peaceful coexistence, including the Hungarian Uprising (1956), the U-2 incident (1960), the Berlin Wall (1961), and the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)11Q&A pairs
- the extension of the Cold War to Asia, including the Chinese Communist victory (1949), the Sino-Soviet Treaty (1950), the Korean War (1950 to 1953), and the consequences for the global Cold War14Q&A pairs
- Analyse the origins of the Cold War 1945-1949, including the Yalta and Potsdam conferences, the division of Germany, the Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan (1947-1948), the Berlin Blockade (1948-1949), and the formation of NATO (1949)5Q&A pairs
- Analyse the high-tension period of the Cold War (Berlin 1961, Cuba 1962) and the subsequent move to detente (SALT 1972, Helsinki Accords 1975)12Q&A pairs
- decolonisation in Asia and Africa (1947 to 1980), including the independence of India and Pakistan (1947), the Algerian War (1954 to 1962), the Suez Crisis (1956), the Year of Africa (1960), and the consequences for the post-war world9Q&A pairs
- Analyse the process of decolonisation after 1945, including Indian independence (1947), the wave of African independence (Ghana 1957 to the Year of Africa 1960), and the Algerian War (1954-1962)12Q&A pairs
- the end of apartheid in South Africa (1948 to 1994), including the National Party victory (1948), the Sharpeville Massacre (1960), the Soweto Uprising (1976), the role of the ANC and Nelson Mandela, international sanctions, the FW de Klerk reforms (1989 to 1990), and the 1994 election5Q&A pairs
- The end of the Cold War (1985 to 1991), the collapse of the Soviet Union (December 1991), the emergence of a unipolar US-led world order in the 1990s, and the acceleration of globalisation15Q&A pairs
- the end of the Cold War, including the role of Gorbachev (glasnost and perestroika), the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe (1989), the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany (1990), and the dissolution of the Soviet Union (1991)13Q&A pairs
- Analyse the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, including Gorbachev's reforms (glasnost and perestroika from 1985), the revolutions of 1989 in Eastern Europe, German reunification (October 1990), and the dissolution of the USSR (December 1991)15Q&A pairs
- Analyse the extension of the Cold War to Asia, including the Chinese Civil War (1945-1949), the Korean War (1950-1953), and the formation of regional alliances15Q&A pairs
- Analyse Middle East conflicts in the post-1945 period, including the creation of Israel (1948), the major Arab-Israeli wars, the Iranian Revolution (1979), and the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988)12Q&A pairs
- the origins of the Cold War 1945 to 1949, including the wartime conferences (Yalta, Potsdam), the division of Germany and Europe, the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, the Berlin Blockade and Airlift, and the formation of NATO5Q&A pairs
- Analyse the rise of China as a global power from 1978, including Deng Xiaoping's reform and opening (1978), the Tiananmen Square crackdown (1989), WTO membership (2001), and the assertive foreign policy under Xi Jinping (from 2012)15Q&A pairs
- The shaping of the postwar world, including the formation of the United Nations (1945), the Bretton Woods institutions, the start of the atomic age (Hiroshima and Nagasaki, August 1945), the beginning of the Cold War, and the start of decolonisation15Q&A pairs
- Analyse the rise of transnational terrorism and the post-9/11 global response, including the September 11 attacks (2001), the war in Afghanistan (2001-2021), the Iraq War (2003), and the rise of Islamic State (2014-2019)15Q&A pairs
- the US civil rights movement (1954 to 1968), including Brown v Board of Education (1954), the Montgomery bus boycott (1955 to 1956), the role of Martin Luther King Jr and the SCLC, the SNCC and direct action, the Civil Rights Act (1964), the Voting Rights Act (1965), and the rise of Black Power5Q&A pairs
- the Vietnam War (1954 to 1975) as a Cold War conflict, including the partition at Geneva (1954), American escalation under Johnson, the Tet Offensive (1968), Vietnamisation, the Paris Peace Accords (1973), and the fall of Saigon (1975)9Q&A pairs
- Analyse the Vietnam War (1955-1975), including the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu (1954), the Geneva Accords, the Tonkin Gulf Resolution (1964), the Tet Offensive (1968), the gradual American withdrawal (1969-1973), and the fall of Saigon (April 1975)12Q&A pairs
- the women's liberation movement (1960 to 1980), including The Feminine Mystique (1963), the Equal Pay Act (1963), the founding of NOW (1966), the contraceptive pill, Roe v Wade (1973), and the consequences for work, law and culture11Q&A pairs