Nazi Germany

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    The Third Reich was a period of history where the country of Germany was under the control of the National-Socialist German Workers’ Party, or the Nazi Party. The rise of the Reich followed Germany’s defeat in World War One and the country’s vulnerable state made it susceptible to the eventual takeover of both Nazi ideology and Adolf Hitler. Through excessive propaganda and manipulation, Nazis were able to unconditionally control Germany for 12 years. During this time, The Reich ignited World…

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    Analysis and Discussion To what extent was propaganda the leading characteristic in bringing about the rise of Hitler and the Nazi Party during the period of 1930 to the early 1940s. Propaganda was the leading factor in bringing about the rise of Hitler and the Nazi party thus playing a large extent in characterising the period. The period between 1930 and early 1940s can be characterised as a period of extensive propaganda in attempts to persuade the nation to believe in a ideology developed by…

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    Holocaust The holocaust also known as the Shoah, was a genocide in which Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany and its collaborators killed about six million Jews. The holocaust affected most of the world and the people of the Jewish race and religion. Adolf Hitler wanted to get all impurities out of his country so he started killing and sending Jews to concentration camps. After Hitler became the most powerful person in Germany he started being biased towards Jews. He also killed people who didn't…

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    In Nazi Germany, fascist racialism tried to build a model for a new society. Nazi party took the racial theory as a foundation for imperialist expansion, while German expansion required the force of arms and enormous sacrifices and money, racial theory became a strong ideology to justify this huge effort. The racial theory emphasized that German race is superior to others, so they need to increase the number of the German race and decrease the number of other race. On the one hand, National…

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    In the book Hitler and Nazi Germany by Jackson J. Spielvogel and David Redles, they portrayed Hitler’s life and many of his ideas including the three important theories of the idea of struggle, the racial conflict of Aryan versus Jew, and the role of leadership. These theories described Hitler as a person and determined how he was going to rule the German nation. The idea of struggle, the racial conflict of Aryan versus Jew, and the role of leadership played an important role in the foundation…

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    It was difficult being an Aryan woman during Nazi Germany. Before Hitler came to power, the Weimer Republic granted emancipation to women, even though it was relatively limited compared to the freedoms that men enjoyed. Women endured discrimination within marriage and in the wider social and economic sphere. In Nazi Germany, Hitler enforced the decree that Germany be made up of a “pure,” exclusively Aryan, race. Hitler insisted Aryans dominate the world, but at the same time prohibited Aryan…

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    Germany, under the control of the National Socialist Party and Führer Adolf Hitler, experienced an influx of laws that attacked the German Jewry and, ultimately, anyone not identified as a member of the Aryan race. The political and social actions of the Nazis set out to correct the nation-wide problems that many believed were the result of granting Jewish citizens political power. Through the passage of the Nuremburg Laws, Germany took radical steps in ridding the Fatherland of the Jewish…

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    from. The groups include political opponents, members of “inferior races”, criminals, and the “shiftless element”. “Homosexuals were classified in the ‘shiftless element’.” - Concentration Camps in Nazi Germany. This quote is explaining what the “shiftless element” is and who was part of that group. Most were in the “inferior races” category/group although there were plenty in the other groups. All in all, the prisoners received harsh and cruel treatment for being different than everyone else…

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    public and expressed Nazi messages the most clearly. In consolidating the Nazi state, the Reich’s Propaganda Ministry adopted the notion of Volksgemeinschaft (“The National Community”). Kamenetsky illustrates the decisive role of the traditional German values of “Volk” and “Blut und Boden” (Blood and Soil) in building a new “folk Reich” and reinforcing classical societal roles. Arguably, the Nazis exploited the precarious political, economic and social environment in Germany to materialize the…

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    countries, but then the pact ended with Hitler 's dead and Germany 's defeat in WWII. The pact shows the ups and downs of having a pact with two greedy dictators that would do anything to gain power and expand their empires. There are many consequences that lead to Nazi Germany’s downfall, but the most negative impact on Nazi Germany was when Hitler decided to declare war on the Soviet Union which resulted in the downfall of Nazi Germany and led Hitler to commit suicide. Hitler…

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