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Brandy Ball Blake And Andrew Cooper: A Comparative Analysis

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Monsters and the way that they reveal themselves is very different for each individual person. As for Adolf Hitler, it came out in the worst possible way. For the Monsters inside of us will all reveal, but the way that they come out is up to us. The root of his evil and how it is shown throughout “Monsters” by Brandy Ball Blake and I. Andrew Cooper. From a young age Hitler was troubled, the shame that he received from his father was something that he took real deep to heart. The monster in him then began to see its first light of day. With great ambitions of one day becoming an artist, he never could get the motivation he needed along the way was not there. His selfish roots were the key factor in what would later become one of the worse monsters …show more content…

It lived inside of him building up over time, coming out whenever the freedom to use it would arise. The point the is made by Ball Blake is that evil and the creation of them string across multiple culture and time periods. The conversations that surround the phenomenons and the issues that monster face in the culture of Adolf Hitler can all relate back to what went on in his life. Born in April 1889, in a small Austrian town in which he saw no room to grow with the things that he wanted. He knew that becoming an artist would soon become something he took dear. His self centered attitude is what prompted his move to Vienna and scratched out a precarious bohemian existence sleeping in hostels and painting postcards. Here he began to develop many of the views which would later characterise his ideology and desire to unite Germany and Austria. The anti-Semitic politics of Vienna mayor, Karl Lueger, were particularly influential. This relates back to the culture change that can be express throughout …show more content…

Trojan horse he promised hope and resurrection for the people of Germany. The part that he didn’t mention was the fact that he also planned to take out half of the population. As the monster within began to manifest itself, Hitler’s oratory skills helped him rise quickly through the ranks of his new party. Building up the confidence in the people he lead would play a big role in giving him the freedom to become the monster that he is known for today. Germany’s government was on the brink of collapse. Hyperinflation saw the mear price of a loaf of bread rise from 250 marks to 200 billion by November. Hitler sought to start a revolution. On 8 November, Bavarian Prime Minister Gustav Kahr addressed a meeting of businessmen at a beer hall in Munich. Hitler burst in with his soldiers (the SA) – a motley crew of far-right paramilitaries. At gunpoint, Kahr was forced to pledge support. With this he gained power over the neighboring countries and their people. When you feed a monster he will always come back for

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