Urquidi, Christina2019-06-182019-06-182017-10-01Christina Urquidi, American Media Coverage of the Rise of Hitler, Virginia Tech Undergraduate Historical Review 6 (2017), 80-109http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90262This study seeks to analyze the response of the US media to the rise of Hitler, a process which occurred during the Great Depression, in the 1930s. At a time when the attention of the country was focused on domestic economic problems, assessment of the rise of a leader who became such a prominent figure is an interesting topic worthy of analysis. While his rise could not be wholly ignored, one can imagine that it would probably have been spoken of more in a less tense domestic climate. Overall, this study shows that the rise of the Führer was not described in as critical of a way as should be expected of a democratic nation, especially one that would go on to fight, in an extremely bloody and protracted manner, this man and all he represented.28 pagesapplication/pdfenIn CopyrightHistoryAmerican Media Coverage of the Rise of Hitler, an Indicator of Depression-Era American Isolationism or of a False Assessment of the Rise of the Chancellor?ArticleVirginia Tech Department of History, Authors retain rights to individual worksVirginia Tech Undergraduate Historical Reviewhttps://doi.org/10.21061/vtuhr.v6i0.562165-9915