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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Do Heidegger\'s Political Views Influence His Metaphysical Views?
This paper examines the relationship between Martin Heidegger's metaphysical views and his political views (which were in support of National Socialism in Germany from the years 1933-1945). Heidegger had been a fervent Catholic in 1910, but he embraced the doctrine of the Modernists and thus turned towards the expression of "Being" offered by the National Socialists.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Stalin's Anti-Semitism and Russian Nationalism Explained
The era of Stalin's dominance in Russia is often marked with covert actions, as many of his actions were guised in secrecy, yet many years of open regard for the history of his bloody reign have offered many ideas about…
Research Paper Doctorate
Olympic Games of Ancient Greece
The legends surrounding the beginning of the Olympic games are many, but it is generally believed that Heracles, the son of Zeus, founded the ancient Greek Olympic games. There is some evidence that the games had been…
Research Paper Doctorate
Hitler Was Able to Win
WWI played a key role in history of modern Germany for the remainder of the twentieth century. Failure in war, which lea to deep economical crisis and abysmal casualties (2 millions dead and 4.5 million wounded) changed…
Paper Undergraduate
Gender roles in society and culture
The effects of the Second World War on gender relationships were observed, brought into public attention, discussed and analyzed in newspaper articles and magazines of the time. The heavy propaganda destined to sustain…
Paper Doctorate
The rape of Nanking
This essay is a reader's review of the Iris Chang book "The Rape of Nanking: The forgotten Holocaust of World War II" (New York: Basic Books, 1997). It contains the following sections: Introduction, The Scope of the Japanese Atrocities in Nanking, Subsequent Revisionist History and International Complicity, and Conclusion and Reaction.
Paper Undergraduate
Discourses of world politics
Herz (1957) surmises that the once understood concept of the sovereign nation-state has become doubtful due to a variety of factors. These uncertainties, he continues, are the result of specific fundamental changes in…
Research Paper Doctorate
U.S. Foreign Affairs Since 1898
Why did the United States go to war in 1898 and what were the consequences of the war?
Essay Undergraduate
Social Darwinism and Social Justice
¶ … Fabian social justice on human nature, freedom, and ethics
Research Paper Masters
Main characteristics of critical thinking in the humanities
The paper discusses essential characteristics of critical thinking in humanities. It uses the works of several authors who wrote about their own struggles for freedom and liberation of mind. The paper incorporates the works of these authors into the discussion of how critical thinking can and must be exercised.