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Essays On European History
Page 4 of 208
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Adolph Hitler, Pius IX, Mahatma Gandhi, Winston Churchill And Chiang Kai-Shek: Impact Comparison
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6 pages in length. When comparing the political and social impact of Adolph Hitler, Pius IX, Mahatma Gandhi, Winston Churchill and Chiang Kai-Shek, one can easily distinguish the line that exists between and among these varied leaders. To compare Hitler to Gandhi is to place a lion and a lamb in the same confined space and watch to see who comes out the victor. Pius IX, as well, represents misdirected authority, while Kai-Shek stands firm in an autocratic society. Churchill's political and social contributions lean toward the quest for complete abolition of tyrannical rule, with Hitler at the top of his list. The writer discusses how the impact each man has had upon the world as a whole has been nothing short of significant. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: TLCgandi.wps
Essay Title: Adolph Hitler, Pius IX, Mahatma Gandhi, Winston Churchill And Chiang Kai-Shek: Impact Comparison
Winston Churchill & Empire
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A 15 page research essay exploring Churchill's protectionist desire to maintain the British Empire at all costs, even when this included forging a permanent alliance with its old enemy, the United States. Explored briefly is the extent of the empire, a historiography of some of Churchill's attempts at maintaining the empire, and the reasons behind his ultimate failure. Bibliography lists 14 sources.
Filename: Cnchurch.wps
Essay Title: Winston Churchill & Empire
The Decline of the Witch Hunts / The End Of The Nightmare
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A 4 page research paper which examines why the witch-hunts of Europe finally declined in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries after plaguing the continent for centuries. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: Declinew.wps
Essay Title: The Decline of the Witch Hunts / The End Of The Nightmare
Cold War Visual Images
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The images of the Cold War Era were not of the cold war. The public media, magazines and movies, were portraying the affluence of and freedom of the American way of life, while the photographers that were taking meaningful photos, such as Diane Arbus, were not published until the paranoia of the McCarthy years had subsided. The only stark representation of the underlying fear that logically accompanies a threat of war of the magnitude suggested in the existence of the Cold War was the images coming from the world of fine art. There were many painters, sculptures and crafters within the genre of abstract expressionism that felt a need to portray the emotional atmosphere hidden in the hearts of the people. This 5 page paper examines the effect of the cold war mentality on the photographs that predominated the pages of Life magazine, the photos of Diane Arbus and the abstract expressionist painting, Study After Velasquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X by Francis Bacon. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: KTvisual.wps
Essay Title: Cold War Visual Images
Germany: The Cold War, Reunification and the Berlin Wall After 1945
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This 10 page paper considers the transformation of Germany over the past half century, with a focus on the process of reunification, the Cold War Era and the Berlin Wall. This paper considers the reasons behind the changes and the implications for modern Germany. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: MHgermCW.wps
Essay Title: Germany: The Cold War, Reunification and the Berlin Wall After 1945
Mexico - A Hot Spot in a Cold War
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A 5 page essay that focuses on Mexico's role in the cold war. Among issues discussed is the 1968 incident of Mexican police brutality toward protesting students in Mexico City and how this incident was misrepresented to both the Mexican public and Mexico's contacts in foreign affairs. Included is an analysis of the authoritative and corruptive rule that dominated Mexican politics throughout the cold war and the changes currently taking place under the new three part governing force in Mexico. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: LCMexCW.doc
Essay Title: Mexico - A Hot Spot in a Cold War
Out of the Cold
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A 5 page book review on “Out of the Cold: New Thinking for
American Foreign and Defense Policy in the 21st Century,” by Robert S. McNamara. This
was a book written very shortly before the end of the Cold War and as such presents a
very unique look into one man’s opinions about where the power struggle between East
and West, was heading. McNamara was incredibly accurate in many of his notions,
stressing that such positions as were held by the two nations, could not continue in light of
all the pressure that was building. No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAcold.wps
Essay Title: Out of the Cold