• Research Paper on:
    Popularity of Adolf Hitler

    Number of Pages: 5

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    In five pages this paper examines the popularity of Adolf Hitler as considered within the texts The Divided Nation A History of Germany, 1918-1990 by Mary Fulbrook and Life in the Third Reich by Richard Bessel. There are no other sources listed.

    Name of Research Paper File: LM1_TLCHtpop.doc

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    were as devious as they were, instilling within themselves a sense of betrayal even before it ever was to occur. Indeed, Hitlers paranoia knew no bounds. With the  overwhelming influence of anti-Semitism, power worship, morality disdain and quest for world domination, Hitler proved as dangerous an entity as history has ever seen. The underpinning of the Nazi  Party and his own popularity grew by leaps and bounds upon these fundamental beliefs, as Hitler sought to annihilate any and all peoples he deemed unworthy. Clearly, the Nazi  objective was aimed at systematic dehumanization, a sobering concept duly noted in Richard Bessels Life in the Third Reich and Mary Fulbrooks The Divided Nation: A History of Germany, 1918-1990.  There can be no doubt that at the height of his popularity, Hitler managed to secure such loyalty as a direct result of  newly employed propaganda. Because his method of authoritarian leadership was so strong, he was able to sway an entire country to follow his madness. Although some would feel  that this was, in fact, a rational choice perspective, in that Hitlers followers truly believed what they were doing was for the good of their own ethnic party, the truth  of the matter was that the entire regime began as a result of the brainwashing of authoritarian leadership. Bessels collective account addresses the  fact that at the time of World War I, totalitarianism was taking a stronghold upon Europe institutions, while the Great Depression proved to threaten the very character and destiny of  Western civilization. The Enlightenment had begun to show signs of wear, directly affecting the manner by which freedom and reason were slowly but surely being cast aside. It 

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