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Papers On Europe & The World Wars
Page 27 of 46
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Rationale For Australia's Contributions To The War Against Hitler In World War II
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10 pages in length. Understanding – let alone condoning – the rationale for Australia's contributions to the war against Hitler in World War II leaves many historians perplexed by what was an obviously poor military and political investment in the Singapore Strategy. The extent to which this move wholly threatened Australia's safety as an isolated white continent was both grand and far-reaching; one might readily surmise that had the adamant caution of some been heeded, this period of history would have had an entirely different outcome. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Filename: TLCAusWWII.rtf
Reading: The Rule of Law and Military Tribunals
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This 3 page paper discusses a reading of the rule of law as applied to military tribunals, specifically the war crimes trials in Nuremberg, Germany, after WWII. The defense argued, among other things, that the tribunal itself was illegal because it charged the defendants under a law that did not exist at the time they committed their crimes. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: HVNuberg.rtf
Reitz’s Heimat and World War II
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A 5 page essay that summarizes and analyzes director Edgar Reitz’s epic 1984 fifteen-hour, TV series, Heimat: Eine Deutsche Chronik (Homeland: A Chronicle of Germany), offers a vision of German history that dramatizes the perspective of the ordinary rural German citizen, while simultaneously relating the texture of historical events in the twentieth century to the cultural ethos that served to define the ways in which the German people perceived themselves and their nation. The first paper on this series (khheimat.rtf) discusses episodes 1 and 2. This paper focuses on episodes 3-7, which cover World War II. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: khheima2.rtf
Reitz’s Heimat, The Final Episodes
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A 5 page essay/reaction paper to the final episodes of Edgar Reitz’s epic 1984 fifteen-hour, TV series, Heimat: Eine Deutsche Chronik (Homeland: A Chronicle of Germany) which carry the narrative into the post-World War II era, concluding in the early 1980s. In these final episodes, Reitz underscores themes, often mirroring earlier action, and establishing a cyclical feel to the life of the village. However, while the action shows how each successive generation tends to mirror its predecessors, Reitz also makes the point that modernity imposes a form of alienation in which the ideal of “heimat” seems not so much lost forever, as misplaced by the generation coming after Maria, Eduard and the family patriarchs, Katharina and Mathias Simon. The earlier episodes of this series are discussed in khheimat.rtf and khheima2.rtf. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: khheima3.rtf
RETRIBUTION AND REPARTATIONS TO HOLOCAUST VICTMS
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This paper examines the reparations and restitutions that the German government and businesses are trying to make to victims of the Holocaust and their family. Also included is a discussion of the Swiss bank controversy and the fact that reparations are not going as well as they should. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: MTholrep.rtf
Rhetoric in Berger's Hiroshima
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A paper which considers the use of rhetoric in John Berger's "Hiroshima", particularly with reference to the concept of Hell, terrorism, and the way in which revisionism is used to distort the reality of historical events.
Filename: JLhirosh.rtf
Richard III, Hitler and Mussolini
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This 8 page paper argues that Richard III, Hitler and Mussolini were all desperately ill, but not delusional; they knew what they were doing and felt no remorse for it. That is, they knew moral right from wrong and chose to act immorally. It also argues that the driving force behind the three was substantially different in each case. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: HVTyrant.rtf
Rise Of Fascism And Nazi Power In Germany
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This 7 page paper discusses the events and situations that led to the rise of fascism in Germany between 1919 and 1931. The German people were lured into accepting and supporting this type of government by Hitler, who exploited the problems Germany had after World War I and then exploited the impact the Great Depression had on Germany. This essay explains how Hitler and his Nazis were able to seduce the country's population. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: PGfascht.rtf
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