"Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed"
This paper is a book review of Hallie's "Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed" which looks at genocide and the moral dilemmas surrounding it.
Analytical Essay # 33341 |
650 words (
approx. 2.6 pages ) |
1 source |
2002
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Abstract
This paper reports that the book is about the moral heroism of this small town called Chambon-sur-Lignon during the German occupation of France"when Jews were being extinguished by the Nazi genocide machine. The author describes that the people in this town saved the lives of thousands of Jewish refugees. The paperr expresses that even in the midst of such human cruelty, Hallie shows that there was still the light of goodness in many humans' hearts; but, throughout the book, he struggles with the dilemma over whether good can prevail over such tremendous evil.
"Ordinary Men"
Analyzes Christopher R. Browning's history of the German Police Battalion in Nazi Germany, comparing it to Daniel Goldhagen's "Hitler's Willing Executioners".
Analytical Essay # 30169 |
757 words (
approx. 3 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2002
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$ 16.95
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Abstract
According to Christopher R. Browning's aptly-titled history of the German Reserve Police Battalion 101, "Ordinary Men", the most significant single factor influencing any given policeman's decision to participate in acts of Nazi genocide, was that individual's personal willingness to obey the orders given to him as a soldier and as a German. In other words, how much was that individual willing to be subject to, for want of a better word, peer pressure? The paper shows that this is in direct contrast to the thesis advocated by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen in his book, "Hitler's Willing Executioners". Goldhagen stresses that the actions of the policemen, soldiers and citizens who enforced the larger Reich ideological agenda were performed enthusiastically. The paper explains Goldhagen's belief that this willingness was the result of many years of anti-Semitic propaganda in Germany, extending back in historical time to the earliest days of German Lutheranism's influences on Christianity.
From the Paper
"The actions of the Reserve Police Battalion 101 become, in essence, even more chilling when viewed through Browning's schema of explanation. It is easy to rationalize inhumanity as a symptom of German culture, and to state that all human beings have pure free will to resist the pressures of position, country, and ideology. The idea that one can still retain one's ethical, moral compass (as evidenced by the disgust and horror of the policemen) and act against it when structural pressures persuade one to do otherwise is far more disturbing and a far more bracing slap in the ethical face of one's judgment."
Tags:Jewish, propaganda, structuralism
Book Review on "Night" by Elie Wiesel
Book Review # 3261 |
1,325 words (
approx. 5.3 pages ) |
0 sources |
2001
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$ 26.95
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Abstract
This paper retells the story line of this Holocaust book and then offers a critique on it.
From the Paper
"This book, which depicts the story of a young man's journey through concentration camps and WWII, is actually telling two stories. One story is the obvious aforementioned about his times at Auswitz and other camps, but there is another story of greater importance. This story deals with Elie constantly asking God questions to which he doesn't understand the answer to, followed by his changing religiously, and then brought to a close when his question is answered and he finally comprehends the answer."
Tags:book, report, holocaust, literature, world, war, II, religion, Aushwitz, god, facism, nazi, crematoriumfascism, icism
Maus I and II
An analysis of Art Spiegelman's books "Maus I" and "Maus II" about what it means to be human.
Analytical Essay # 24354 |
900 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
2 sources |
2002
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$ 19.95
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Abstract
Analysis of Art Spiegelman's books MAUS I and MAUS II about what it means to be human. Plot. Importance of the family and of people helping each other. Concept of fate. Horrors of Auschwitz & the Holocaust. Book's comic book style and format. Characters of mice who embody the highest human ideals.
From the Paper
"Maus is presented by its author, Art Spiegelman, in an unusual comic-book-style format. The form selected has a number of powerful advantages--it is a fresh approach to a much-told story, it humanizes and personalizes the tragedy much more than might a dry narrative, it feeds to the particular understanding of a visual society and a generation more attuned to the image than to the word, it may be a more palatable mode of presentation of such difficult subject matter for some people, and it accomplishes all of this in an ironic fashion, utilizing the methods of the comic book to tell a very un-comic story.
The mice in Maus are if anything more human than human beings because they embody all of the ideals that humans prize. This fact is heightened by these characters being portrayed as mice--the characteristics we see in them are not the..."
Hitler and the Holocaust: Intentionalism vs. Functionalism
A detailed historiographical analysis of the theories of intentionalism and functionalism as they relate to the Final Solution and the Holocaust.
Analytical Essay # 27135 |
2,985 words (
approx. 11.9 pages ) |
9 sources |
MLA | 2002
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$ 52.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the theories of intentionalism and functionalism in relation to the development and implementation of Hitler's Final Solution. The first theory holds that the Final Solution was the direct result of Hitler's anti-Semitic ideology and his orders to that effect. The second theory of functionalism asserts that the Final Solution developed haphazardly as a result of external pressures. The paper draws upon a wealth of historiographical evidence to support its findings. The writer weighs the merits of both theories and ultimately finds in favor of the theory of intentionalism.
From the Paper
"The Holocaust was the deliberate and bureaucratic annihilation of eleven million people, six million of whom were Jews, by Hitler and his Nazi regime between 1933 and 1945. The Holocaust was the greatest genocidal attempt ever made and arguably the greatest demonstration of man's inhumanity to man that the world has ever seen. Even now, the Holocaust's legacy of death and destruction strikes fear and sorrow into the hearts of people around the world. Perhaps one of the greatest and most pressing questions of modern civilization is just how and why the horrible atrocities of the Holocaust occurred. There are two modern theories as to the origin of Hitler's Final Solution, the final plan for the extermination of all Jews and other "inferior" peoples. These two theories are known simply as intentionalism and functionalism. The traditional theory of intentionalism holds that there is a clear linear relation between Hitler's anti-Semitic ideology and the Final Solution."
Tags:anti, final, functionalism, genocide, hitler, semitism, solution, germany, nazi
Primo Levi's "Survival in Auschwitz"
Summary and analysis of Primo Levi's book about his experience in a Nazi extermination camp, "Survival in Auschwitz".
Book Review # 50001 |
1,932 words (
approx. 7.7 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2004
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$ 36.95
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Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to introduce, discuss, and analyze the topic of the Holocaust and how Primo Levi survived his imprisonment in Auschwitz. Specifically, it answers the questions: What perspective does Levi provide on day-to-day survival within Auschwitz? Was there order amidst the chaos of mass murder?
From the Paper
"Primo Levi was one of the lucky few who survived the horrific prison camp of Auschwitz operated by the Nazis with the sole purpose of exterminating as many Jews as possible. Levi opens his book with the statement, "It was my good fortune to be deported to Auschwitz only in 1944, that is, after the German Government had decided, owing to the growing scarcity of labor, to lengthen the average life span of the prisoners destined for elimination" (Levi 9). Initially, this opening sentence in the Preface not only illustrates the strength of the man who the reader will come to know throughout the book, but his essential optimism, which is one of the many things that ultimately helped him survive his nine months in the world's most notorious Nazi prison camp. As the book unfolds, the traits necessary to survive become quite obvious, and Levi's trait of optimism even in the pit of despair is one of the things that helped pull him through, and helped many others survive, too."
Tags:dehumanize, war, machine, prisoners, drowned, saved, victim, broken, liberated, broken
A comparison of the Holocaust in Europe in the 1930s and 40s with the genocides in Cambodia and Rwanda.
Comparison Essay # 103477 |
2,927 words (
approx. 11.7 pages ) |
20 sources |
APA | 2006
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$ 52.95
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Abstract
This essay compares the Cambodian and Rwandan genocides to the Holocaust in Europe in the 1930s and 40s. The paper examines who the victims were in each instance as well as whom the perpetrators were that committed these heinous acts. The paper then looks look at the methods and mechanisms used to kill the victims and their degree of efficiency and how they differed in each instance compared to the Holocaust. The paper discusses the time frame and geographic locations, in order to understand the killings better. The paper also tries to explain why these genocides occurred. In conclusion, this paper shows that through methods such as fear and death, all three genocides accomplished the murder of the innocent for the ultimate goal of power none more then the Nazi Holocaust in Europe.
From the Paper
"Throughout the twentieth century, many atrocities have been committed against various ethnic groups throughout the world. Some have been on a large mass scale, with extreme precision and efficiency, others were more primitive. These various scales can be looked at by means of the total number of people killed, the time span it took to kill and dispose of the bodies and the number of people removed forcibly from their homes and taken to other counties to be exterminated. The Holocaust in Europe was the most unique genocide in history. There have not been any other genocides that have been the same since the 1930/40s' massacres on the level of scale or precedence. The killing efficiency that was experienced in the Nazi death camps throughout Europe that claimed the lives of countless victims has not been seen since."
Tags:Nazi, Hitler, anti-semitic, mass, killing, tragedy
The December 1943 Luftwaffe attack on Bari, Italy.
Research Paper # 25324 |
4,016 words (
approx. 16.1 pages ) |
13 sources |
APA | 1997
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$ 65.95
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Abstract
Historical paper on the little known accidental release of toxic mustard gas during WWII by the Americans. The paper examines in great deal the attack on Bari and discusses many of the battles before and after this attack. It questions whether the American's use of chemical agents was useful in achieving their goals and how this impacted the rest of World War Two.
From the Paper
"During World War II, one of the main goals of the Nazis in Germany was to destroy as many "unwanted" populations as possible. To accomplish this, many of the "unwanted," including Jews, Gypsies, Disabled people and Homosexuals, were imprisoned in death camps. Finding quick and efficient ways of exterminating these people was a continuous challenge throughout the war. The gas chambers finally became the most efficient way, and the most common chemical used in the chambers was Zyklon B. However, Himmler, the Reichsfuhrer-SS, was never satisfied with the operation of the death camps, nor the success of Zyklon B. Himmler was constantly searching for more economical methods to exterminate large segments of the unwanted population, and ironically, an allied catastrophe in 1943 gave him an opportunity to test a toxic war gas. The Luftwaffe bombing of allied merchant ships in the harbor at Bari, Italy, on December 3, 1943, was one of the German Air Force's most successful missions of the entire war. Twenty five ships were sunk, instantly killing 2000 persons. It was the worst allied naval disaster except for Pearl Harbor; and it seriously delayed allied efforts to overrun Italy. But the real horror of the event and one of the best kept secrets of Word War II was the unleashing of 100 tons of poison gas! "
Tags:allies, chemical, gas, germany, himmler, mustard, nazis, war
An analysis of the impact of events on the tragic life of Eli Weisel in his novel "Night".
Book Review # 119438 |
1,015 words (
approx. 4.1 pages ) |
0 sources |
2010
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$ 21.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses how Elie Wiesel's timeless holocaust story, "Night", is a poignant and powerful work. In particular, the paper explores the tragic events of the main character's life, and how they changed the character, Numerous direct quotations from the novel are used in the paper.
From the Paper
" The terrible events slowly had an impact on Elie's way of thinking and more abruptly changed him from an innocent boy to a worldly man. At his home, he had seemed very naive about what was happening in the world around him such as the idea of a war and the thought that Hitler simply could not annihilate all the Jews. He too, believed that 'Hitler will not be able to harm us, even if he wants to' (8). Obviously the citizens realized how terribly mistaken they were as they were led to the ghetto and then shipped to concentration camps. He lost his pacifistic nature when they were forced to leave by the Hungarian police. Elie wrote, 'that was when I began to hate them, and my hatred remains our only link today. They were our first oppressors. They were the first faces of hell and death' (19). Death and destruction always affect our outlook on our own life. As soon as we are aware of such a terrible power in the world, we begin to see and fear it. Innocence is definitely bliss for Elie. "
Tags:concentration, camps, holocaust, death
An analysis of the Nuremberg Trials and how they left a legacy of injustice.
Essay # 57858 |
1,148 words (
approx. 4.6 pages ) |
4 sources |
MLA | 2002
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$ 23.95
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Abstract
This paper explores the details of the post-World War II trials of Nazi officials. It concludes that while these individuals certainly deserved punishment, the manner in which the trials were conducted violated many international standards of justice.
From the Paper
"Documentation reveals that many Germans who were peaceful and kind citizens before 1933, participated in acts of genocide for nearly twelve years and then became quiet, good people again afterwards. It has been theorized that a psychological break occurred during this time. Another personality emerged from the human psyche, summoned by the Nazi leadership. When the war was over, this evil nature disappeared as quickly as it had been created. Therefore, it cannot be claimed that executing Nazi war criminals was a matter of safety. They posed no real danger upon the war's conclusion."
Tags:crimes, genocide, germany, humanity