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Term Paper # 86555 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Seventh Cross", 2005.
A discussion of the movie "Seventh Cross".
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 7 sources, $ 35.95
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Abstract
The paper analyzes the movie "Seventh Cross". The paper discusses the characters of Zillich and Wallau. The paper discusses their differing attitudes: Wallau was certain that the structure of the world held firm and would continue to hold firm regardless of what struggles might come; Zillich lived a self-fulfilling prophecy that the global structure was unreliable. The paper further discusses how the entire Nazi movement was, unlike communism, a revolt against Western civilization, reasoned discourse, and human rights.

From the Paper
"Serve their Paradigmatic Function Zillich and Wallau are similar only in that both are doomed; they differ radically in attitude. In the last moments of his life, Wallau was certain "that the structure of the world held firm and would continue to hold firm regardless of what struggles might come" (Seghers 294). Zillich lived a self-fulfilling prophecy that the global structure was unreliable. At the same time, Zillich exemplifies the bureaucratic efficiency and brutality of the Third Reich. He represented the entire Nazi movement which, "unlike communism, was a revolt against Western civilization, reasoned discourse, and human rights"."
Term Paper # 85868 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Holocaust, 2005.
An overview of Wolfgang Benz's arguments for the rise of Nazism and the Holocaust.
2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 3 sources, $ 80.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the argument of Wolfgang Benz about the legal framework that was passed in Germany leading up to the Holocaust. In particular, it notes how Benz explains the rise of National Socialism and the policy they instituted leading to the Holocaust in terms of the institutional mechanism of the Third Reich's systematic legal implementation of laws to legitimate the structural dehumanization of the European Jewish community. It also looks at how Benz explores this legal framework in terms of a number of developments in the law in Germany beginning in the early 1930s and continuing into the war.

From the Paper
"The European Holocaust of the twentieth century represents both a singular event in the course of modern European history and a significant global event of the twentieth century. The complexity of such a historical event, such as the bureaucratic and technological administration of extermination, has made this particular historical moment one of the most difficult to understand and comprehend. Nonetheless, a thorough understanding of the historical documentation can only assist us in coming to comprehend one of the most barbaric moments in modern human history. Wolfgang Benz explains the rise of National Socialism and the policy they instituted leading to the Holocaust in terms of the institutional mechanism of the Third Reich's systematic legal implementation of laws to legitimate the structural dehumanization of the European Jewish community. "
Term Paper # 85638 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Informed Heart", 2005.
A review of psychologist Bruno Bettelheim's "The Informed Heart".
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 1 source, $ 44.95
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Abstract
In the second half of the twentieth century Bruno Bettelheim came to be known as an expert in the field of child psychology. This paper examines how before his suicide in 1990 he made groundbreaking strides in the treatment and understanding of emotionally disturbed and autistic children. It looks at how in his book, "The Informed Heart", which is part memoir and part analysis, Bettelheim takes a close look at what the psychological aspects of being a holocaust survivor as well as how they factored into the lives of those imprisoned.
Term Paper # 85466 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Bent" by Martin Sherman, 2005.
This paper reviews and discusses the book "Bent" by Martin Sherman, a story of homosexual men in Nazi concentration camps.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 1 source, $ 35.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the play, 'Bent' and its historical significance. It further discusses elements within the script which evoke emotions and which are controversial in nature, yet necessary in relaying the event of the story. The play serves as an education to the world in the treatment of homosexual men in Nazi Germany during the 1930s, and allows the audience into the suffering of these 100,000 men who have been ignored for decades.

From the Paper
"The play, Bent, by Martin Sherman, is one which tells a story that has been little known to the world for decades. It depicts the lives of homosexual men who were forced into concentration camps, and who endured lives of fear and suffering by Hitler, and Nazi Germany. As the world recalls the horrors that Hitler inflicted on the Jews, this issue is one that received neither public condemnation, nor acknowledgment until the play was produced. While Bent is an important statement on the historical world of our society, it is also filled with moments that engage the audience in emotions that are universal in their impact. The main character, Max, is a self-centered man who has no respect for himself, nor anyone else in his life. "
Term Paper # 85383 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Nazi SS, 2005.
An analysis of the operations of the Nazi group known as the SS.
1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 5 sources, $ 71.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the history and missions of the SS. SS units such as the Leibstandarte became Hitler's most effective fighting units for they were the most ideologically motivated and the best equipped divisions in the German military. The paper shows that like all SS units, the SS Leibstandarte had originally been formed as a one hundred twenty man personal bodyguard for Hitler and guarded him at the Nuremberg rallies.

From the Paper
"On September 1, 1939 Adolph Hitler unleashed the overwhelming and terrifying military might of the German Luftwaffe and Whermacht upon Poland. Over the next few months Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, and France were also attacked and conquered. And in 1941, Yugoslavia, Greece, and Russia were invaded. All of this was done with the fervent and overwhelming approval of a great majority of the German people, tens of thousands of whom took a direct role in establishing the lethal infrastructure of Hitler's Final Solution, which was operated by Heinrich Himmler's SS. One the war began the original security role of the SS was expanded. In addition to being in charge of security, the SS also began to provide elite combat units."
Term Paper # 85095 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Anne Frank, 2005.
Analysis of "The Diary of a Young Girl" by Anne Frank.
675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 3 sources, $ 26.95
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Abstract
The paper shows how life is difficult for Anne Frank, a lonely Jewish girl, who goes into hiding with her family to be safe from Hitler and grows into a mature young lady with keen insight into her family's feelings of fear and frustration. It presents an analysis of the diary that Frank kept during her period of hiding.

From the Paper
"I hope I will be able to confide everything to you, as I have never been able to confide in anyone, and I hope you will be a great source of comfort and support" (Frank 1). Anne Frank was a Jewish girl who went into hiding with her family to hide from Hitler's army. The story begins with Anne Frank having a birthday party where she receives her diary. Frank loves the diary because she will be able to use it to express her feelings. "
Term Paper # 85048 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Self vs. Others in Nazi Nationalism, 2005.
Presents an understanding of 'self' versus 'others' within the framework of Nazi nationalism.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 3 sources, $ 44.95
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Abstract
In this paper, the theme of self versus other through national identity is important through the Nazi example due to the horrific genocide that was aimed toward the Jewish peoples. History has developed along these lines in understanding the dangers of fascism or dictators that pose as socialist or democratic institutions. This paper shows that by understanding the dangers of governments that govern with extreme reactionary differentiation toward minorities, one can realize the scope of the Nazi Party and its evolution over the 20s, 30s, and onward into the genocide of the 40s.

From the Paper
"The aim of this study is to present an argument for the development of Nazi nationalism that developed over a time line of the late 1920s and into the 30s. The development of psychological propaganda was critical in how the Nazi Party developed from a Socialist platform in regards to the evolution of a nation state in the 20s. In this manner, the theme of self versus others becomes the dictates of a national identity through race and economic political objectives in the 1930s. By understanding the basis of self (the national identity) and the others (Jews and other foreigners), the theme of identity through Nazi nationalism becomes the basis for realizing the evolution of the Nazi Socialist Party into a fascist regime into the Second world War of the 1940s."
Term Paper # 85015 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Nazi Propaganda and Nationalism, 2005.
Examines the framework of Nazi and Jewish propaganda in relation to defining nationalism.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 4 sources, $ 44.95
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Abstract
In this paper it is shown that Jewish racial view portends the economic and militant observation that appealed to lower and middle class Nazi Germans, since the blame was being shifted to a racially pure forum in regards to Germanic nationhood. The paper shows that this aspect of Germany was defined in the fascist perspective, which demanded a sever cut with all foreign peoples that did not fit the Aryan system of physical, ideological, or religious dictates that the Nazi Party was fomenting in the 1920s.

From the Paper
"The aim of this study will be to analyze the certain dictates of nationalism, and how these are defied within Goebbel's Nazi Propaganda before the advent of the Third Reich. By understanding he premise of nationalism through militancy, ideology, and race superiority, the idea of nationhood is defined through these mediums in relation to history and societal influences in government. In essence, the nation can be defined through the racial, governmental, and historical perspectives of the Nazi regime in relation to Goebbels' Nazi propaganda machine. The basis of nationhood for the Nazi's is directly related to the idea of anti-Semitism, which has historical been a foundation for securing an ideology that unites an economically and political oppressed group of people."
Term Paper # 84898 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Forms of Nationalism, 2005.
This paper explains Goebbels and his Nazi propaganda as a synthesis of nationalism and anti-Semitism.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 3 sources, $ 35.95
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Abstract
The paper examines the meaning of nationalism in the context of Joseph Goebbels' Nazi propaganda pamphlets. The paper claims it is evident that the form of nationalism he was promoting was a synthesis of nationalism and anti-Semitism. The paper explains that this was not a Nazi invention, for nationalist sentiments and attitudes in Europe had been conditioned for centuries by anti-Semitism. Hitler, Goebbels, and the Nazis simply synthesized endemic European anti-Semitism and combined it with their ideology of a pure Aryan master race in order to unify the German people behind the Nazi Party.
Term Paper # 84579 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Historical Objectivity, 2005.
This paper examines the impact of revisionist history on the Jewish Holocaust.
675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 2 sources, $ 26.95
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Abstract
The paper explains how both Lipstadt and Cohen offer poignant views of revisionist history and the subjectivity of historical evaluation that makes their arguments more politically based, rather than accurate. By the objective facts and witnesses that were part of the Holocaust, Stiles defines their experience as invaluable to historical accuracy when he states: "The last victim of a genocide is truth." In this manner, the victims become the ultimate historical objectivity that records and holds sacred the tenants of memory, which prevent history from repeating itself.

From the Paper
"This Holocaust study will analyze the premise of revisionist history through the varying aspects of the Jewish Holocaust, but more importantly through the larger premise of genocide. By analyzing the negative aspects of revisionist theory that deny the Holocaust, one can argue the invalidity of politics that become unraveled behind the truth of genocide. In this manner, historical revision can be warped through political subjectivity and power, rather than observing the very policy that define a genocide under the Geneva Convention. The modern claim that "The last victim of genocide is truth," written by Richard Cohen in the article: "Killing Truth," portray the last, but only reason that the Holocaust was a real historical event."
Term Paper # 84533 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Prostitution and the Holocaust, 2005.
This paper examines the terrible role of prostitution in the Nazi concentration camps.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 5 sources, $ 44.95
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Abstract
The paper explores the role of prostitution in the Nazi concentration camps and how they related politically, economically and socially within these environments. The paper explains that by examining, in detail, all three of these tiers of Jewish women and the prostitution rings they were forced to participate within, one can realize the horror of German political and military policy in humiliating these marginalized peoples.

From the Paper
"This holocaust analysis will examine the role of Jewish women and prostitution within the economic, social, and political formats of concentration camps within the Third Reich of World War II. Outline: A. Introduction. B. Political Issues of Prostitution in the Holocaust I. The concentration camp prostitution policy. II. The validity of concentration camp implementation of prostitution policy III. The military politics of prostitution for Jewish Women C. Economic variables of prostitution within Hitler's concentration camps I. Women and monetary profit from prostitution in concentration camps II. The profiteering of concentration camp officials through prostitution. III. Indentured servitude and prostitution in concentration camps."
Term Paper # 83940 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Holocaust, 2005.
This paper confronts the idea that the Holocaust did away with the idea that Enlightenment rationality could lead to an improvement in humanity.
1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 4 sources, $ 62.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that the Holocaust can be conceived of as an entirely rational act. The author points out that Freud and others have posited the idea that human beings lack an internal moral compass, which is a belief that presupposes that human beings lack the capacity to determine the innate rightness or wrongness of a particular act. The paper relates that Frayn focuses on the indeterminacy of truth and suggests that the subjective nature of the truth makes any efforts to rationally arrive at universal ones.

From the Paper
'There can be little doubt that the Holocaust was one of the worst - if not the worst - acts of iniquity ever carried out by human beings. Nearly six million European Jews were murdered by the Nazi regime as Hitler and his thugs attempted to wipe an entire ethnic group from the face of the earth - and many more lost family members, homes and all of their personal possessions as a result of the Nazi rampage. With that grim specter in mind, this paper confronts the fallacy of believing that enlightenment conceits or ideals - championing as they do the 'rationality' of human beings - are possible in the real world."
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Papers [157-168] of 339 :: [Page 14 of 29]
Go to page : <— 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 —>