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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5-page paper explores a few of the reasons why the average German citizen in Nazi Germany accepted fascism so readily. The paper discusses the definition of fascism as well as other factors toward the acceptance of fascism. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTgerfas.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
this have happened during the 20th century? The Germans, after all, were considered a civilized people. The idea that the Germans would allow Hitler to achieve power, kill millions
of people in concentration caps, and wage war against almost an entire world without taking a stand can appear somewhat confusing, at least on the surface. However, in examining all
of the literature during that period there are very good reasons why the German people supported Adolf Hitlers brand of fascism during the 1930s, even while the rest of the
world was scratching its collective head as to how and why the Germans were allowing all the atrocities to go on. The Nazi party achieved political success and fomented the
rise of fascism by exposing the German population to brute force, pageantry, staged spectacles, and by enforcing a fierce nationalism in the wake of World War I.
Before demonstrating how and why the German people of the 1930s embraced fascism, it would be a good idea to define what, exactly fascism is,
and determined how it related to Nazi Germany during the 1930s. In its most basic form, fascism means any system of government that resembled the acts of Benito Mussolinis Italian
government that was in power from 1922 to 1943 (Wikipedia, 2002). This form of fascism, which followed the form that the Nazis supported, exalted nations and race above the individual,
and relied on violence, propaganda and censorship to suppress the opposition (Wikipedia, 2002). In addition, fascism supported severe economic and social regimentation, as well as ethnic nationalism (Wikipedia, 2002). Today,
we regard fascism as a dangerous belief. However, its very order and nationalism appealed to the German people. According to William
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