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TRANSCRIPT
Notebook Check So FarRacial Tension in the 1920s /15Social Tension in the 1920s /151920s Politics and Economy /15Great Depression and New Deal (handwritten) /20New Deal Glossary (printout) /10Great Depression Problem/Solution Chart /15WW2 Intro (2‐sided printout re: isolationism) /20Sentence‐Phrase‐Word War Stories /15WW2 Warfront (includes maps) /15WW2 Homefront /15Propaganda Poster Analysis /15WW2 Wrapup /15GRAND TOTAL /185
Types of Propaganda
Name- Calling—the use of derogatory or negative words. It connects a person or a thing to a negative image or symbol
Glittering Generalities—these are virtue words (good, democracy, religious, motherhood) for which we have deep seeded ideas.
Euphemism—this is used when propagandists make something awful or negative more palatable.
Transfer—when the propagandist transfers the importance, power, or approval of something we respect and accept to something else they wish us to accept and respect. Symbols are often used.
Testimonial—the recommendation or endorsement of something by a person whose opinion is valued (or who is famous).
Bandwagon—everyone is doing it and so should you.
Fear—the propagandist warns that something horrible will happen to the group or person if they do not follow a specific course of action.
sample
Propaganda Gallery Walk
• Complete the organizer provided by looking at the posters around the room.
• Yes I know they’re printed on your paper… Get up anyway
Poster One—(Bandwagon) The poster encourages everyone join the war effort-to build arms for victory.
Poster Two—(Fear) If you do not buy war bonds-the Nazis will come for your children (fear).
Poster Three—(Euphemism and Fear) The poster shows a sailor dead on the beach-but his death is called a “loss.” The poster also uses fear as a motivator for not speaking out of turn.
Poster Four—(Glittering Generalities) It is “patriotic” to do these things
Poster Five—(Transfer) If you believe that the Revolutionary War was necessary (for liberty) then of course you should fight in this war (for liberty).
Poster Six—(Testimonial) There are few more recognizable images then Santa. Children and adults would have recognized the image.
Notes – WW2 Homefront
MobilizationOffice of War Information (1942)• war news• patriotism• recruit women to work• PropagandaWar Production Board• industries converted to war production• Allocated raw material • Organized scrap drives
– iron, aluminum, paper– Waste cooking fats for making
glycerin
Patch worn by Office or War Information personnel
A “War Educational Bulletin” produced by the War Production Board
EconomyWar Bonds• To help finance the war ($185 billion sold)• High interest rates
Office of Price Administration• limit wartime inflation• “ceiling prices” • Rationing
– meat, butter, sugar, coffee, shoes– Stamps and points system– Black market emerged
National War Labor Board• Mediated labor disputes during war• “No-strike pledge”
Each family received ration books (left) and stamps (above) for
determining its monthly allotment.
Rationing: Books and Stamps
WomenMilitary• Women’s Army Corps • WAVEs• WASPs• noncombat jobs:
switchboards, mail. nurses, clerical, drivers, storekeepers
Workforce• Defense plants• 18 million women• Earned less than men
WAC Director Col. Oveta Culp Hobby (right) confers with WAC members at
Mitchell Field, NY
Women in the Workforce
Factory workers polish Plexiglas nose cones for A-20 attack bombers
African Americans and WW2
Still faced discrimination• limited employment in
defense plants• Race riots • “Double V” Campaign
called for “victory at home and abroad”
African Americans and WW2
Tuskegee Airmen• All-black combat unit
formed in 1941
Fair Employment Act• prohibiting racial
discrimination in government defense agencies
Airmen Marcellus G. Smith and Roscoe C. Brown in Italy, 1945
The Navajo Code Talkers
• Used to transmit messages in the Pacific Theater
• Code never broken
Code Talkers Henry Bake and George Kirk send messages in the
Pacific Theater, 1943
Mexican Americans and WW2
Bracero Program• Mexican laborers brought in for
farm work
“Zoot Suit Riots” - LA• Conflicts between sailors on leave
and young Mexican Americans
Japanese American Internment
• FDR issued Executive Order 9066
• Removed more than 110,000 Japanese from the West Coast (2/3 citizens)
A map of relocation centers in the western U.S.
Japanese American Internment
• Forced to sell homes, businesses, property
• Poor conditions:– Barbed-wire enclosures– Barracks with cots and
no plumbing– Meager food budget
Korematsu v. U.S. (1942)
• Korematsu refused relocation
• Appealed on constitutional grounds
• S.C. ruled the order a valid during wartime
Japanese Internment
Round 1 - Watch U.S. Gov’t War Relocation Video
Discuss: • What were some of the reasons for internment
offered in the newsreel?• How does the newsreel portray internment? Is it
positive or negative?• Who do you think the audience was for this
newsreel?
Japanese Internment
Round 2 - Read ONLY documents B and C
Discuss• Do you find these documents more or less
trustworthy than the government newsreel? Why or why not?
• Why is the date of the Munson report important?
Japanese Internment
Round 3 - Read ONLY documents D and E
Discuss• Which of these documents do you think has a
better explanation of Japanese internment? Why?
• Why were Japanese Americans interned during World War II?