"Modern history nazism as totalitarian" Essays and Research Papers

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    Germany under the Nazi Party was a totalitarian regime that crashed due to the inefficiency of having familiarity with a democratic government. A totalitarian government could be too powerful and be too demanding due to being centralized on a dictatorship where everyone has to follow a certain leader. In the novel 1984 the government is under control by Big Brother and they take away the rights of the people of Oceania and manipulate them. In 1984‚ George Orwell uses the theme of psychological manipulation

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    There are several results after the First World War‚ including the resentment about the Paris Peace Conference‚ and the rise of Mussolini and Hitler. But it is believed that the rise of Fascism in Italy and Nazism in Germany was not primarily a result of the First World War. The Paris Peace Conference was the real main result of the First World War. After First World War‚ the Treaty of Versailles took away Germany’s colonies and forced the country to pay $33 billion to Britain and France in the

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    Neo-Nazism The urgent alarm bell to World War Ⅲ Neo-Nazism—it seems to be a little strange word. This is because every human who lives in this world must consider Nazism to be an absolutely evil thing. Therefore‚ it is hard to believe in such a “new‚ modern‚ and modified Nazism”. According to an online dictionary‚ Neo-Nazis is a group that “believes in the idea and policies of Hitler’s Nazis and that sometimes commits violent acts” (“Neo-Nazi”). However‚ this definition does not seem to

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    Nazism – the dominant force in Germany In the 1930’s‚ Nazism became the dominant force in Germany. Adolf Hitler fought for Germany during World War One. Afterwards he became the instrumental piece in the formation and growth of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP/ Nazi Party).With help and taking advantage from various key factors‚ Hitler and the NSDAP rose into power. He expressed his hatred towards the defeat of World War One‚ and played on grievances from the Great Depression

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    Nineteen Eighty-Four: A Response to Totalitarian Rule “The great strength of the totalitarian state is that it forces those who fear it to imitate it‚” – Adolf Hitler. The concept of totalitarianism is a political system where the government ceases to recognize any limits to its authority‚ and in turn‚ successfully regulates every aspect of public and private life of the population. This type of regime is considered extremely undemocratic and fundamentally a dictatorship‚ where a sole party or

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    Did Stalin Succeed In Setting Up A Totalitarian State? Overall‚ Stalin did not create a totalitarian state‚ the very definition of which suggests the state’s complete control and authority over every aspect of society; the economy‚ politics‚ religion and culture; as‚ despite all of the action Stalin took to gain this‚ he was constantly facing opposition. Many would argue that the wide range of economic measures used to enforce control over the population allowed Stalin to succeed in gaining total

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    How totalitarian were Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany? Giovanni Amendola first coined the word ‘totalitarian’ when describing the Italian Fascist government under Benito Mussolini in 1923 as different to conventional dictatorships. It is after this that the word was popularised to have both negative and positive connotations. However‚ German theorist Carl Friedrich and political scientist Zbigniew Brzezinski collaborated to formulate a modern day politically scientific definition known as the

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    WORLD WAR 1 SOURCES Source A: British Propaganda poster 1916 Source A is useful and reliable to a historian as it is a primary source. Source A is a British propaganda poster and was designed in 1916 by the British recruitment office or the Government‚ to encourage married men to enlist. Two years after the war had commenced the excitement and romantic ideas of an adventure had died down‚ so did the numbers for enlistment. There for propaganda posters such as source A were put in place. In this poster

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    almost instantaneous‚ and we have the means to our money from almost anywhere in the world. With this increase ease of availability‚ crime coordination and implementation has also become easier. Logistics for criminal enterprises has streamlined. Our modern conveniences have made the ability to enact crimes remotely greater than it has ever been before. Every day there is an increase in [globalization]‚ meaning that interactions and integrations amongst people‚ corporations and political systems from

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    Ayn Rand’s novella‚ Anthem‚ depicts a totalitarian society that oppresses the ideology of individualism. Within these societies children live apart from their families and grow up without any inherited characteristics of being an individual. Anthem is an example of this kind of society because it showcases the link between a totalitarian dictator’s power to the oppression of individualism found in a children that live apart from their families. Totalitarian Dictators enforce the arrangement of children

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