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Nazi Germany
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Nazi Germany stands as one of the most examined subjects in modern historical study, appearing in courses on European history, World War II, genocide studies, political science, and even psychology. The period covers the rise of Hitler and the National Socialist state, the mechanics of authoritarian power, military expansion, and the Holocaust. Its academic interest lies in how a modern industrialized nation descended into state-sponsored genocide and global warfare, making it essential for understanding twentieth-century history, political radicalization, and moral collapse. Works such as Elie Wiesel's Night and films like Downfall also bring the subject into literary and media analysis courses, widening its disciplinary reach.

Student papers on this topic approach it from several distinct angles. Historical and political analyses examine Nazi Germany's financial preparations for war, its nuclear ambitions, and the authoritarian roots stretching back through Bismarckian conservatism. Comparative essays place Nazi Germany alongside the USSR, examining parallel structures of genocide and repression. Other papers take a psychological lens, drawing on frameworks like Zimbardo's situational research or Kohlberg's theory of moral development to explain how ordinary individuals participated in atrocities. Some essays focus on consequences, tracing Germany's division into East and West after the war.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of events. Evidence drawn from specific policies, documented historical decisions, or primary accounts carries more weight than general claims about evil or ideology. The most common pitfall is treating Nazi Germany as historically isolated — strong essays consistently connect it to prior political conditions, international contexts, and verifiable causal factors.

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Paper Undergraduate
World War II Japan\'s Wars of Aggression
Japan's wars of aggression and conquest began long before the fascist takeover of the 1930s and the alliance with Nazi Germany in 1940, and the idea that the Japanese were a superior race also had a long pedigree—as indeed did the Nordic-Aryan racism of the Nazis. Both used the tactics of blitzkrieg and surprise to end up in control of most of Europe and Asia by 1942, before the tide began to turn against them at the battles of Midway and Stalingrad
Paper Masters
Hegemony in General Marxists Tend to Focus
Hegemony refers to the domination of one class in a society over other classes. The current paper discusses how hegemony is achieved via the use of a powerful media that is able to indoctrinate working classes into the ideology of the ruling classes. This perspective is approached from a Marxist position but also discusses softer perspectives.
Research Paper Doctorate
Propaganda of the \'Big Lie\'
One of the main theories of the totalitarian propaganda machine of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany was that of the 'big lie,' or the theory that if one told a lie that was 'big enough,' the lie was more likely believed by…
Research Paper Doctorate
Moral theories and ethical frameworks
¶ … personal theory of good and evil, right and wrong moral agent is a person capable of rational understanding. An entity such as a nation, a group or a corporation is not such an entity.
Research Paper Doctorate
Accuracy of George Orwell\'s Predictions
The Accuracy of George Orwell's Predictions and What They Hold for Our Future
Essay Doctorate
Nazi regime policy changes toward enemies, 1939-1940
This paper discusses Nazi Germany. Before 1940, German policy centered on nation building more than anything else. In the last five years of his reign, Adolf Hitler instead focused on eradicating so-called enemies of Germany, including Jews, homosexuals, and gypsies. This change of policy ultimately led Nazi Germany and Hitler's status as the embodiment of evil.
Paper Masters
Allies Won the Opening Line of Historian
Book review, four pages in length, on Overy, Richard. Why the Allies Won. W.W. Norton & Co., 1997. The book is about why the allies won world war two and reframes the war. The essay has a clear thesis statement but also offers some personal opinion at the end. The thesis is that Richard Overy believes that it was moral cohesion that helped the allies win. The author also believes the the eastern front was the most important.
Research Paper Doctorate
American history and US politics
Role of the United States in Europe After WWII
Research Paper Doctorate
Gary Powers Spy Plane Issue and How US Status Was Compromised
The Cold War has been called the twentieth century's 'longest-running international morality play.' It was a play that lasted decades and produced thousands of players, both major and small, as well as two critical…
Paper Undergraduate
The politics of ideology in Brecht's Galileo
Louis Althusser (1918-90) was one of the foremost Marxist theorists in the Western world, and advocated an especially orthodox version of Marxism that was always close to the Communist Party line.