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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page overview of the manner in which Nazi ideology overtook a people. The Nazis spread an ideology which, although we recognize as deleterious today, seemed to many to be a prudent address of the situation which they were confronting. That ideology centered around the decimation of the Jewish people. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPnazi5.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Nazism as one of the most deplorable developments of the World War II era, Nazism proved itself an attractant to millions of the German people. The Nazi Party and
Adolf Hitler simply took advantage of the societal discord which characterized Germany following World War I. They used their phenomenal power of persuasion to convince Germans that theirs was
the only way to right the many societal wrongs which engulfed them. The Nazis spread an ideology which, although we recognize as deleterious today, seemed to many to be
a prudent address of the situation which they were confronting. That ideology centered around the decimation of the Jewish people. We tend
to think of Hitler and the Nazis as some societal anomaly. In actuality, however the type of dictatorship which would be skillfully put into place by the Nazis had
erupted elsewhere in the world within many different cultures and peoples. Indeed, similar dictatorships have been in existence throughout the world since before written history. In practically every
case the situation which allows that dictatorship to take hold involves a deeply discontented people and a charismatic leader who promises to provide the salve for that discontent. Evans
(1998) notes: "What really needs explaining is not Hitler, but the historical context which brought
him to prominence and power, and convinced him ultimately of his own infallibility" That historical
context played a great role in shaping the actions of Hitler. Some attribute the destruction which would ultimately unleashed during this period more on the Nazi Party than on
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