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Auschwitz
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Auschwitz stands as one of the most studied sites of atrocity in modern history, and students across history, literature, religious studies, and Holocaust studies courses regularly write about it. The camp system it represented—functioning simultaneously as a concentration and death camp—raises urgent questions about human behavior, institutional violence, and moral collapse under totalitarian regimes. Works like Primo Levi's Survival in Auschwitz, Art Spiegelman's Maus I and II, and writings by Tadeusz Borowski provide firsthand and artistic accounts that anchor academic inquiry, while broader questions—including what the Holocaust reveals about the nature of God—push essays into theological and philosophical territory.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Literary analysis is common, with close readings of Primo Levi's memoir examining themes of survival, dignity, hunger, and dehumanization among prisoners. Historical and comparative essays place Auschwitz within the wider context of Nazi concentration and death camps or draw contrasts with other mass atrocities such as the Rape of Nanking. Some papers focus on testimony and memory, drawing on diaries and survivor accounts, while others examine American perceptions of the Holocaust or argue for the ongoing importance of Holocaust remembrance and education.

A strong essay on Auschwitz requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of events. Evidence drawn from primary sources—survivor memoirs, diaries, and documented historical records—carries significant weight and should be analyzed rather than simply summarized. The most common pitfall is treating the subject as self-evidently important without developing a specific interpretive claim, which leaves the essay descriptive rather than analytical.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Holocaust and Online Research Available
¶ … Holocaust and online research available regarding the Holocaust. Specifically it will discuss the concentration camps of the Holocaust, focusing on Auschwitz and revisiting the camp today.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Historical events and their significance
¶ … personally charged works Train to Pakistan and Survival in Auschwitz there is a clear sense that circumstances rule the day and that characters' lives are changed by the events that surround them, of which they have…
Essay Doctorate
American Religious History Defining Fundamentalism and Liberalism
Defining fundamentalism and liberalism in Christianity is hardly an exact science, especially because prior to about 1920 there was not even a term for fundamentalism as it exists today.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Elie Wiesel and Holocaust literature
Elie Wiesel is a renowned American-Jewish novelist and political activist. He is best known for being a Holocaust survivor, the subject of the majority of his over forty books. His best known work, Night, is a memoir of…
Paper Undergraduate
Essay 3
Each of the variations of Christianity presents significant beliefs about the concept eternal life. Following death, Christians honor the idea of heavenly life, and spiritual immortality in the kingdom of God.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Daddy by Sylvia Plath Sylvia
Sylvia Plath's Daddy is a deeply personal account of coming to terms with the loss of a parent, i.e. her father, but beyond that, the poem is a reflection of the paternal symbol and its implication in Plath's life.
Paper Doctorate
Faith and God in Elie Wiesel\'s Night
This paper discusses the question of faith and God in Elie Wiesel's autobiographical novel Night. Elie grew up as a young man of faith but the sight of unimaginable cruelty he witnesses in Nazi concentration camps shatters his innocent belief in God and His goodness. He begins to ask hard questions, wondering whether God existed or whether He was good. His faith is eventually transformed, as he remained a man of faith nonetheless.
Paper Doctorate
Franklin Delaney Roosevelt\'s Attitude Towards the Jewish
My research question is about Franklin Delaney Roosevelt's attitude towards the Jewish problem during the War. I have read and heard such contradictory accounts spanning from Jews who congratulate for his involvement to some scholars and others who criticize him for an alleged anti-Semitism. Being that this is a famous personality that we are talking about and a prominent President of the USA; I felt that enlightenment on the subject was important. I wanted to go to the source, and therefore I accessed original documents from the collections of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. These, compounded with other sources, are the results that I found.
Research Paper Doctorate
Japanese perspectives on nature in modern haiku
Japanese culture is known for its ability to make superb use of space. Japanese architecture melds form with function to keep Tokyo and other urban centers populous but workable, Japanese cuisine creatively utilizes…
Research Paper Doctorate
Night by Elie Wiesel
Elie Weisel's Night: Contrasting Elie And His Father