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Nazism
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Nazism refers to the political ideology and movement led by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party in Germany, which held power from 1933 until Germany's defeat in World War II. Students encounter this topic across history, political science, and Holocaust studies courses, as well as in literature and film analysis. Its academic interest lies in how a modern democratic society transformed into a totalitarian regime responsible for systematic genocide, continental war, and profound ideological violence. The movement's roots in Pan-Germanism, its relationship to broader European fascism, and its catastrophic consequences make it one of the most studied subjects in the humanities.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Comparative analyses examine the ideological and structural similarities and differences between Nazism and other authoritarian systems, including Italian Fascism and Stalinism. Historical and political approaches trace the Nazi Party's rise, its racial ideology centered on the Aryan Nation concept, and the operation of concentration and death camps. Other papers take an economic lens, exploring how class concerns and the aftermath of World War II shaped Germany's trajectory. Literary and cultural approaches draw on works such as Victor Klemperer's I Will Bear Witness, while some papers extend outward to examine Nazism's relationship to European colonization and nuclear ambition.

A strong essay on Nazism requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey. Evidence drawn from primary sources, historical case studies, or specific policy records tends to carry the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating Nazism as an isolated phenomenon — strong essays situate it within the wider contexts of European history, economic crisis, and political ideology to explain both its emergence and its consequences.

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Paper Doctorate
Book Review: Goldman's The Crucial Decade and After, 1945–1960
The book, The Crucial Decade and After: America 1945-1960, published in 1966, is about the transformation of the post-World War II peace into the globalization of the Cold War. It was first written in 1956 and then…
Paper Undergraduate
Germany Research Project Germany Is a Prominent
Germany is a prominent country in Europe as it stands as the second most crowded nation and the biggest economy in Europe. Seeing how it has the largest economy, it does alter the links between the prominent nations in the world. German history is filled with social and political movements. Adolf Hitler and the era of Nazism is an unfortunate and prominent part of the History of the nation. It was after both the world wars that Germany was destabilized and broken into two pieces. Following the Second World War, in 1945 the country was taken hold by the Allied powers which included United Kingdom, America, France and the Soviet Union. (CIA)
Paper Doctorate
Holocaust Frame Narratives Are Important
This is a three page paper about a prompt: Art Spiegelman's graphic novel Maus and Ruth Klüger's memoir Still Alive struggle with the issues of how to represent traumatic events that challenge belief on the one hand and are subject to the unreliability of human memory on the other. Both books blur the lines between real and fictional, memory and history, the real and the represented. Likewise, Film Unfinished explores the fine lines between documentary, art, and propaganda. All of these cultural texts experiment with different aesthetic and stylistic strategies to frame their stories of the Holocaust outside of the purview of traditional academic scholarship. What does it mean to frame a photograph, film, comic strip, or memoir?
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.
Essay Doctorate
Full Overview Analysis Book the Rape Nanking the Forgotten Holocaust WWII Iris Chang
The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang is a graphic and controversial account of the Japanese siege of China which resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands of Chinese, including civilians, and the rape of tens of thousands of women. The unlikely hero of the tale was a Nazi named John Rabe who created a 'safe zone' protecting Chinese refuges. This paper summarizes the book and contextualizes it in the larger debate of what causes persons to engage in genocide.
Paper Masters
Diary of a Young Girl
Anne Frank's "The Diary of a Young Girl" is one of the most compelling accounts documenting the experiences of a Jewish individual in World War Two's Europe. The book is comprised from a series of texts that the young adolescent wrote in an attempt to discharge stress she accumulated as the Nazi war machine occupied the Netherlands. While many historians feel that this book makes it difficult for the masses to understand the more general aspect of the Second World War in Europe, the truth is that it puts across the exact message that it is meant to express: war is horrible and war crimes are even more horrific.
Paper Undergraduate
The anarchical interwar period and the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of 1939
Beyond doubt, the world was in an anarchical state in the 1920s and 1930s, particularly as the Great Depression devastated the global economy and aggressive, fascist regimes took power in Germany and Japan.
Paper Undergraduate
Norine Dressers Book Multicultural Manners
Norine Dresser's Multicultural Manners was designed a handy guidebook for white, middle class Americans who have to deal with others of a different color, religion or ethnicity, either in big cities in the United States…
Paper Masters
Morality concepts and theories
Utilitarianism is a philosophy that asserts whatever brings the most happiness to the most people is the right choice when moral choices are at hand. This paper examines the question of whether a moral sacrifice (which some philosophers and scholars insist is necessary)can be justified. The position of the paper is that a moral sacrifice may be necessary in some situations, but one need not sacrifice one's future just to satisfy another person's concept of morality.
Paper Doctorate
Italian neorealism: film movement and cultural significance
This essay on Italian director Roberto Rossellini's 1946 Paisan discusses the emerging aesthetic of Neorealism in Italian postwar film. Paisan adopts many techniques from the novel, in terms of its multifaceted method of storytelling. It is neither realistic nor a false spectacle. There is an authorial point-of-view but the director also draws upon his experience as a witness to history.