Rhetoric and Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Whose voice guides your choice?
Advertisements

Using Propaganda Techniques
The Persuasive Process
Propaganda Techniques in the Media Whose Voice Guides Your Choice?
Propaganda and Persuasion Techniques people use to make you believe what they have to say.
Using Persuasive Technique and Avoiding Fallacy Mrs. Gatz English 9.
Ms. Dunne LP CORE.  Some people go right on to college after high school; others take a year or more off to work or travel. Which do you think is the.
Standards we will cover today: By PresenterMedia.comPresenterMedia.com.
ENGLISH 10 PROPAGANDA. WHAT IS IT? Information of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote or publicize a particular political belief. The dissemination.
Persuasion Is All Around You
Propaganda Techniques. What is propaganda? It is designed to persuade. Its purpose is to influence your opinions, emotions, attitudes, or behavior. It.
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Public Opinion. Public opinion is the collection of differing attitudes that members of a public have about a particular issue. –Subject to rapid change.
Persuasive Techniques used in Advertising What Consumers Should Know.
Persuasive Rhetoric So What is RHETORIC? Persuasive Rhetoric Is …. The art of using language to argue and convince others to adopt a position or act.
Propaganda techniques in the media Whose voice guides your choice?
Propaganda Propaganda is a systematic form of purposeful persuasion that attempts to influence the emotions, attitudes, opinions, and actions of specified.
Propaganda Whose voice guides YOUR choice?. How do you decide who is the best candidate?
Persuasion in Advertising. How it Works Ads are carefully designed messages that influence our opinions, emotions, attitudes and behavior in order to.
More Propaganda. BANDWAGON: This gives the idea that everyone is doing this, or everyone supports this person/cause, so should you.
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Persuasion Is All Around You! “Can You Hear Me Now?”
Persuasion, Propaganda, Advertising
Monday, February 8 Fallacies Notes PAL BEG last article in packet. Start PAL BEG for another article in the packet.
Persuasive Strategies/Techniques
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Agenda Invitation to Write: “If you have nothing to hide, then you have nothing to be worried about.” Does that statement defend government policies about.
9 propaganda techniques used by advertisers.
Propaganda What is propaganda? The goal of propaganda is to spread ideas that further a cause: political, commercial, religious or civil. It is used to.
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Part V: Reading Critically Chapter 12: Propaganda Techniques Chapter Twelve Propaganda Techniques In this chapter, you will: 1.become familiar with common.
WHAT DOES PROPAGANDA HAVE TO DO WITH THE CHOICES I MAKE?
Propaganda techniques Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Persuasive Appeals. Methods used to convince people to agree with a position. Methods used to convince people to agree with a position. There are several.
Rhetoric and Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Propaganda techniques Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Propaganda Techniques in the Media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose Voice Guides Your Choice?
Propaganda Selling WWII. PROPAGANDA Propaganda is the means by which advertisers convince the public that they should buy an item (or an idea).
Advertisement and Propaganda a look at mass media.
Review of Rhetorical Devices: Rhetorical question: asking a question where the answer is obvious and doesn’t need to be directly answered Allusion: referring.
 A type of communication that persuades readers/viewers to feel a certain way about a person or group.  It often omits information or uses emotionally.
Propaganda and Political Cartoons. How can art be used to sway one’s opinions?
Propaganda techniques Or How the media gets Americans to buy, think, and vote.
Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?
Whose voice guides your choice?
Rhetorical Devices and Fallacies
Propaganda is … … form of communication
Use the same paper from yesterday....
Persuasive techniques
Whose Voice Guides your Choice?
Influencing Government
Whose voice guides your choice?
Deconstructing Nazi propaganda Images
Get ‘em on your side by any means necessary
What is Propaganda? What is a fallacy? is designed to persuade
Whose voice guides your choice?
Propaganda.
Whose voice guides your choice?
Whose voice guides your choice?
Notes on Argument.
Whose voice guides your choice?
Whose Voice is Really Guiding Your Choice?
What are Propaganda techniques?
Unit 3: Notes #22 PROPAGANDA
Whose voice guides your choice?
Whose voice guides your choice?
How do you prepare yourself to vote?
Presentation transcript:

Rhetoric and Propaganda techniques in the media Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002 Whose voice guides your choice?

What are Propaganda techniques? Propaganda is designed to persuade. Its purpose is to influence your opinions, emotions, attitudes, or behavior. It seeks to “guide your choice.”

Who uses Propaganda? Military Media Advertisers Politicians You and I

Bandwagon Everybody is doing this. If you want to fit in, you need to “jump on the bandwagon” and do it too. The implication is that you must JOIN in to FIT in. Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002

Ike for President

Slippery Slope a relatively small first step leads to a chain of related events culminating in some significant effect, much like an object given a small push over the edge of a slope sliding all the way to the bottom.

We’ve all seen how this ends

Name-calling A negative word, image or feeling is attached to an idea, product, or person. If that word or feeling goes along with that person or idea, the implication is that we shouldn’t be interested in it.

Not for Tennessee

Testimonial A famous person endorses an idea, a product, a candidate. If someone famous uses this product, believes this idea, or supports this candidate, so should we.

Irvine for Congress

Glittering Generalization A commonly admired virtue is used to inspire positive feelings for a person, idea, or product. Words like truth, democracy, beauty, timeless are examples of those general terms.

Train

Hasty Generalization reaching an inductive generalization based on insufficient evidence— essentially making a hasty conclusion without considering all of the variables.

Mama grizzlies Sarah doesn’t speak for me

Plain-folks appeal This idea, product, or person is associated with normal, everyday people and activities.

Real People

Transfer Symbols, quotes, or images of famous people are used to convey a message. The message may not necessarily be associated with them.

Slavery

Logos: argument based on logic

Ethos: Developing trust, ethics, or credibility.

Pathos: Emotional words Words that leave us with positive feelings are used to describe a product, person, or idea. We associate those words and, therefore, those positive feelings with the product.

IN YOUR HEART YOU KNOW HES RIGHT

Faulty Dilemma when someone tries to force on you only one answer (either or ) Ex: “Either you have faith or you believe science.”

"This is Alabama. We Speak English. If you want to live here, learn it.”

Fear Mongering the use of fear to influence the opinions and actions of others towards some specific end.

Peace Little Girl “Daisy”

Straw Man: a type of argument and is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position

Saddam back in power?

Card-Stacking only presenting information that is positive to an idea or proposal and omitting information contrary to it.

Lesser of Two Evils tries to convince us of an idea or proposal by presenting it as the least offensive option.

Here is another gem I found while making this assignment that I felt you needed to see Vote for Basil