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Rise And Fall Social And Political
1,416 wordsOn November 18 th of 1918, Germany, a member of the Central Powers, surrendered unconditionally to the allies. World War I had ended with a total of 37 million casualties, including 9 million dead combatants. German propaganda had not prepared that nation for defeat, and its suddenness resulted in a sense of injured German national pride. Following the defeat of Germany in World War I and in the midst of a great worldwide depression, both the social and political climates were prime for a dictat...
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Rite Of Spring Neo Classicism
1,951 wordsStravinsky's relations with his various publishers would make a fitting subject for a long-running TV soap opera, complete with courtroom dramas, emotional farewells, some embarrassing contractual wrangles, and of course background music based on the Ronde des princesses in The Firebird. The association with Chester Music would certainly provide some of the best episodes. Stravinsky landed in Chester's lap after the First World War, a conflict which, among other things, played havoc with interna...
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Treaty Of Versailles Overthrow The Government
1,710 wordsIn 1919 the Weimar Republic was set up in Germany. From its birth it faced numerous political problems, for which the causes were many and varied. These problems included political instability, deep divisions within society and economic crisis; problems were constantly appearing for the new government and from 1919 - 1923, the Weimar Republic experienced a period of crisis. In 1916, the German Social Democratic Party, which controlled the Reichstag, split in order to cater for the tensions betwe...
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How The Treaty Of Versailles Changed Trajectory World
735 wordsHow the Treaty of Versailles changed the Trajectory of the World [Date] Treaty of Versailles changed Introduction After six months of negotiations at the Paris Peace Conference, the Treaty of Versailles was finally signed on November 11, 1919 in the follow-up of the Armistice treaty to officially end World War 1. The Versailles treaty basically required Germany and her allies to accept responsibility for the world war and agree to territorial concession, disarmament and to pay reparations to som...
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Czar Nicholas Ii Anti Semitism
1,634 wordsA major problem in understanding World War II is dealing with its ironies. Germans mastered most of the military lessons of World War I, but lost; Anglo-Americans and Russians learned little or nothing from the earlier conflict, but won. Germans hailed Adolf Hitler as the greatest German in history; but had Otto von Bismarck rather than Hitler ruled the Third Reich, there would probably not have been a Holocaust and a German Century might have begun after the French collapse, in 1940. Instead, N...
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James Weldon Johnson W E B Dubois
3,817 wordsWayne Cooper As used in the 1920 s, the term " New Negro" referred to more than the writers then active in the Negro Renaissance. The New Negro also included the Negro masses and especially the young. " For the younger generation, " Alain Locke wrote in 1925, " is vibrant with a new psychology. " This new spirit he described as basically a renewal of " self-respect and self-dependence. " The new confidence which characterized Negroes in the twenties result...
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Beer Hall Putsch German Workers Party
2,204 wordsThe Rise of Hitler I. Introduction Exactly how did Hitler come into power? What drove him to become the way he was? Why did he kill all those people? In this report, I? ll examine these questions and many others. II. The early years Hitler was born on April 20, 1889 at Brand am Inn in Austria-Hungary. He went by his mothers last name Schicklegruber until 1876 when he took the name Hitler. He spent much of his childhood in upper Austria linz. He had a terrible record in school. He stayed in schoo...
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Rio Grande Director Producer
2,914 wordsDorothy John Ford John Ford Dorothy R. Donahoo English 2145 Dr. Klink 04 / 03 / 99 John Ford was an American motion-picture director. Winner of four Academy Awards, and is known as one of Americas great film directors. He began his career in the film industry around 1913. According to Ellis, Fords style is evident in both the themes he is drawn toward and the visual treatment of those themes, in his direction of the camera and in whats in front of it. Although he began his career in the silent f...
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Marlon Brando Buster Keaton
2,876 wordsThe history of the illustrious film studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, more commonly known as MGM, begins with Marcus Loew, a first-generation American and son of Austrian immigrants, who began purchasing penny arcades in 1905 with his business partner, Adolph Zukor. They were soon buying up motion-picture theaters, and by 1912, when Zukor struck out to form the production company Famous Players (which eventually became Paramount), Loew had his own business, Loew 39; s Theatrical Enterprises, which o...
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D W Griffith Buster Keaton
6,372 wordsWhile films made during cinema 39; s early days may appear archaic, awkward, or even unintentionally funny to some modern viewers, they were part of a revolution in entertainment that was never before equaled and perhaps may never be equaled again. Later innovations such as television and the internet (so far more of an information medium than an entertaining one) owe their acceptance, if not their very existence, to the initial discovery that people are endlessly fascinated when a narrative s...
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