Transcript Propaganda

DEFINITION
• Propaganda is biased information designed to shape public opinion and behavior.
DEFINITION
EFFECTIVENESS DEPENDS ON
• Propaganda is biased information
designed to shape public opinion and
behavior.
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A message that will resonate with a specific audience
Using techniques tailored to the message
Choosing the most effective means of communication (or
medium)
An environment or climate that is receptive to the
propaganda message
An audience that is sympathetic to the propaganda
message
PROPAGANDA TECHNIQUES
AD HOMINEM
OR NAME CALLING
Fritz Hippler, the president of the Reich Film Chamber,
directed this film with input from German Minister of
Propaganda Joseph Goebbels. A pseudo-documentary, it
included scenes of Jews shot in the Warsaw and Lodz
ghettos by propaganda company crews attached to the
German military.
APPEAL TO FEAR
An antisemitic poster published in Poland in March 1941.
The caption reads, "Jews are lice; They cause typhus." This
German-published poster was intended to instill fear of Jews
among Christian Poles.
BANDWAGON
This election poster emphasizes the message of jumping on the
Nazi political bandwagon, as represented by the hands raised in
a unified Nazi salute. Nazi propaganda frequently stressed the
power of a mass movement to propel the country forward, subtly
underscored by the upward angle of the hands. This poster
typifies the propaganda strategy of using simple confident
slogans, with bold graphics often using the characteristic Nazi
colors of red, black, and white.
COMMON MAN
Poster: "We’re for Adolf Hitler!" This poster was aimed at
unemployed miners. Nazi propaganda targeted specific
subgroups in the German population with messages
specially crafted to speak to a group’s desires, hopes, and
needs. This poster appears to imply that a vote for Hitler will
mean an end to unemployment for this group.
CHERRY PICKING
OR CARD STACKING
After the massive defeat at Stalingrad, Nazi propagandists
began to alternate messages of fear and hope, demanding
fanatical devotion to the homeland and ruthless treatment for
the nation's enemies. This poster appeared just after Stalingrad.
It was part of a major propaganda campaign with the theme
"Victory or Bolshevist Chaos." This poster offers a stark contrast
between the peaceful, abundant future promised by the Nazis
and the threat of a bleak and miserable life under Communism.
GLITTERING GENERALITIES
Poster: "For Freedom and Life / People's Storm“ In a last
ditch effort to fend off military defeat, Nazi Germany began
conscripting boys and elderly men to serve in the newly
formed national militia, the Volkssturm (People's Storm).
Mjölnir [Hans Schweitzer], artist; 1944
TRANSFER
Through their control of cultural institutions such as museums, under the
Reich Chamber of Culture the Nazis created new opportunities to disseminate
anti-Jewish propaganda. Most notably, an exhibition entitled Der ewige Jude
(The Eternal Jew) attracted 412,300 visitors, more than 5,000 per day, during
its run at the Deutsches Museum in Munich from November 1937 to January
1938. Special performances by the Bavarian State Theater, reiterating the
exhibition's antisemitic themes, accompanied the exhibition. The Nazis also
associated Jews with "degenerate art," the subject of a companion exhibition
in Munich seen by two million people. This image shows the cover of a 1937
publication advertising Der ewige Jude.
SOURCES
• United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Propaganda
Exhibit. https://www.ushmm.org/propaganda. Accessed on January 26, 2017.