world war i propaganda. definition propaganda is defined as: information, ideas or rumors...

12
World War I Propaganda

Upload: trevor-nathan-chambers

Post on 25-Dec-2015

230 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

TRANSCRIPT

World War I Propaganda

DefinitionPropaganda is defined as:

Information, ideas or rumors deliberately spread to help or harm a person, group, movement, institution, nation, etc.

The Use of Propaganda

• Justify involvement in the war• Solicit men to join• Procure money and resources to sustain

their military campaign• Boost morale• Urge the public to save• Encourage the purchase of war bonds

Forms of Propaganda

• Speeches• Photos• Newsreels• Magazines and newspaper

articles

• POSTERS

Propaganda Techniques

• Bandwagon: persuading people to do something by letting them know others are doing it

• Testimonial: using the words of a famous person to persuade

Propaganda Techniques

• Transfer: using the names or pictures of famous people, but not direct quotations

• Repetition: the product name is repeated at least four times

• Emotional words: words that will make people feel strongly about someone or something

Techniques• Appeal to authority:

quoting prominent figures to support a position, idea or course of action

• Appeal to fear: building support by instilling anxiety and panic in the general population

Techniques• Black and white fallacy:

providing only two choices (Ex. “you are either with us or you are with the enemy.”)

•  Common man: using ordinary language and mannerisms to convince the audience that a position represents the common person

Techniques• Demonizing the

enemy: making individuals from the opposing nation appear to be subhuman, worthless, or immoral through suggestion or false accusations

Techniques• Direct order: telling the

audience exactly what actions to take and eliminating any other possible choices.

• Flag-waving: justifying an action on the grounds that doing so will make one more patriotic

Techniques• Oversimplification: providing

simple answers to complex social, political, economic, or military problems

• Virtue words: using words that tend to produce a positive image when attached to a person or issue. (Ex. peace, , happiness, security, wise leadership, freedom)

Example