Propaganda A Brief Overview. What is Propaganda? Ideas or beliefs that are intentionally spread *Propaganda is not inherently bad- it has a bad rap due.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WWII Take Home Notes.
Advertisements

World War II The War in Europe Mr. Herneisen. Background – World War I  Germany & Ottoman Empire (Turkey) vs. USA, Great Britain, France  Germany loses.
World War II Major Events
US Entry into WWI.
Chapter 34 Origins of World War II. 1 Italy: Invaded Ethiopia, 1935and aided fascists in the Spanish Civil War. In 1936 Spanish General Franco started.
Welcome to Pearl Harbor, Hawaii!! Saturday, December 6, 1941.
Chapter 9, Lesson 1 The World Divided. Mr. Julian’s 5 th Grade Class.
 Kellogg-Briand Pact signed– war is not a national policy President Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, and Frank B. Kellogg, standing, with representatives.
OPENING ASSIGNMENT  Under what circumstances should the United States enter into a war?  Give an example to support your answer.
Understanding Propaganda Finding the motives in messages.
Hitler’s Lightning War Ch. 16.1
On the Homefront Propaganda
The Media 1916: First war films Newspapers provided the majority of the public with war news 1 Behind the scenes of a film in Austria, 1918.
World War II The Evolution of Conflict. OVERVIEW In this lesson, you will examine: The concept of “total war” The use of technology in war through “blitzkrieg”
Propaganda in WWI.
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 BATTLES AND EVENTS NAZIS AND HOLOCAUST HOLOCAUST MORE BATTLES USA IN THE WAR WAR WWII COMES TO TO AN END WAR BEGINS.
WWI Facts Alliances TRIPLE ENTENTE: Germany, Italy, Austria-Hungary
Discussion Point Why was the Battle of Stalingrad a critical turning point in World War II?
World War Two Propaganda.
More Causes of WWII “They’re GREAT” Recall… The first major cause of WWII Happened in 1919 Made Germany very bitter Contained the “War Guilt Clause”
Propaganda is the art of persuasion. It is the spreading of ideas, information or rumor for the purpose of helping or injuring an institution, a cause.
Review!!! The “Big Four” The Paris Peace Conference January 1919 Allied Leaders The “Big Four” meet –United States, Great Britain, France, and Italy.
The Lend and Lease Act & Cash and Carry By: Sarah Sakian.
What Does Propaganda Teach Us? What Does it Do? Informs and persuades individuals in all levels of society Teaches us how to think Teaches us how to act.
U.S. History Final. War Atom Bomb KamikazeOverlordIsolationist
 Americans saw what happened last time they got into war.  Did not want to go to war again, especially since Great Depression is going on.  Stay Isolated.
Pearl Harbor Address to the Nation
Second World War A Timeline. In 1939, Hitler invaded Poland on the 1 st September. Britain and France declared war on Germany two days later.
The end of a 20 year truce!.  Aggression by the totalitarian powers  Nationalism  Failures of the Treaty of Versailles  Weakness of the League of.
American Neutrality in World War I Neutrality  “All Americans ought to be neutral in fact, as well as in name … impartial in thought as well.
Unit VIII. World War II. B. Turning Points of War.
Bellringer—9/30 1.Who was the Soviet leader that led by fear and massive propaganda? 2.Name the fascist leader of Italy whose nickname was Il duce or “the.
Invasion!!! World War II officially started on September 1 st On this date Adolf Hitler and his German garrison invaded virtually defenseless Poland.
CH:5 The Road to Revolution. Standards 8.16 Explain how the practice of salutary neglect, experience with self-government, and wide spread ownership of.
Propaganda “ The Weapon of Influence ”. What is propaganda? Propaganda is a persuasive type of message presentation aimed at serving an agenda. Propaganda.
Propaganda of World War I By: Taylor Carey U.S. History/ Period 4.
Getting to California Allied Strategy – Although Stalin wanted the U.S. and England to attack Germany on the Western Front, Churchill and Roosevelt wanted.
BELLWORK What are some effects of Mustard Gas? What are some effects of Mustard Gas? Why were the first two years of WWI a stalemate? Why were the first.
Chapter 16, Section 2: Things To Know What is a blitzkrieg? Who was Winston Churchill? The Neutrality Act of 1939 allowed nations at war to buy arms and.
The Rules No talking when it is the other teams turn- points will be deducted No Notes or any kind of cheating!!-this will result in disqualification.
Chapter 4 Review.
 “Let no man or woman thoughtlessly or falsely talk of America sending its armies to European fields… This nation will remain a neutral nation, but I.
World War One Propaganda during World war one. What is Propaganda? Propaganda is a form of communication that is aimed at influencing the attitude of.
Definition: The spreading of information aimed at influencing the opinions or behaviours of large numbers of people The world “propaganda” comes from.
The War for Europe and North Africa (Ch. 17, Sec. 2) - part 1.
American Neutrality in World War I Neutrality  “All Americans ought to be _____________, as well as in name … impartial in thought as well.
WWI Facts Alliances –TRIPLE ENTENTE: –TRIPLE ALLIANCE: War lasted from: 19__ – 19__ People thought war would last no longer than __ weeks 10 million deaths:
Introduction World War I ended in Twenty-one years later, in 1939, World War II began. What caused the war to begin? What did Americans do during.
 Agenda:  Entrance Ticket  D-Day Notes  Video Clip  Primary Document Analysis  Target:  Students can analyze Dwight D. Eisenhower’s style, motivation,
Writing a Memorandum on Preventing WWII You have been hired by the World Peace Archive to write a memorandum suggesting four actions that the US and its.
Operation Overlord. An excerpt from (the official website of the U.S. Army): “June 6, 1944, 160,000 Allied troops landed along.
US Enters The Great War (WWI). US Neutral at First Maintained a policy of isolationism (Monroe Doctrine) US traded more often with Allies than Central.
Chapter 16 World War Looms Section 4 America Moves Towards War.
The U.S. Enters the War Unit 3 Section 3 Part 2. A. American Isolationism U.S. was Isolationist in the 20s and 30s-did not want to get involved in another.
Section 2 – Focus Questions What early gains allowed the Axis powers to control much of Europe? What were the Battle of Britain and Operation Barbarossa?
The Allies defeat the Axis powers, the Jewish people suffer through the Holocaust, and Europe and Japan are devastated by World War II. World War II,
Chapter 20 World War II. Create a funny Headline!
World War II: U.S. Isolation and Entry
DO NOW READ Pearl Harbor Address to the Nation, p65
World War Two Propaganda posters
1st September 1939 The Start of World War 2
WWII Lightning War
Personal Connections paper due Friday February 10
Social Studies Chapter 7
Propaganda Poster Walk
WWII Lightning War
World War I Propaganda.
WWII Lightning War
America Moves Toward War Section 4
America Moves Towards War
Presentation transcript:

Propaganda A Brief Overview

What is Propaganda? Ideas or beliefs that are intentionally spread *Propaganda is not inherently bad- it has a bad rap due to its use in war times, however, there are many examples of propaganda that have spread ideas and messages that have benefited society in one way or another.

Characteristics: Propaganda… uses words and pictures in order to reach a goal is sometimes controversial can be concealed or open, emotional or containing appeals to reason, or a combination of emotional and logical appeals relies on suggestion and persuasion

Example 1 It is the spring of Allied armies face the German columns, but there is little action at the front, and a group of French soldiers find time to listen to an enemy broadcast. “Where are the English?” asks the radio voice. The enemy broadcaster is speaking in French. The soldiers listen uneasily. “I’ll tell you where your English comrades are,” continues the voice. “They lounge about Paris and fill the night clubs. Have you seen a Tommy in the Maginot Line? Of course not. French soldiers, you will find the Tommies behind the lines—with your wives.” Propaganda. Of course. The German propaganda strategy of division, intended to sow suspicion and doubt about the fidelity of an ally. The propaganda preparatory to the blitz.

Example 2 “England is ripe for invasion.... You might as well expect help from an army of mastodons as from the United States.... You are on a doomed ship.... Whether or not the people of Britain want to see their fields turned into graveyards and their cities into tombs is a matter for themselves and Mr. Churchill. Perhaps if the British people could speak, they would ask for peace. But since the official voice of England asks not for peace but for destruction, it is destruction we must provide.” The propaganda of fear. The voice of defeatism.

Example 3 It is the autumn of The United States is still neutral, but an American Army is in training, a Navy is being strengthened, and Lend-Lease supplies are crossing the Atlantic. An American sits at home tinkering with his short-wave set and he picks up an English-language broadcast beamed to North America from Germany. “The German government and the German people have only the friendliest of feelings for the United States, the home of so. many American citizens of German descent.” The words of the radio speaker are honeyed words. “Let it be said for once and all,” the broadcaster continues, “that a German victory in this war is no threat to English democracy—and certainly not to American democracy.” The propaganda voice of appeasement. Here is the strategy of attempting to hypnotize a people with an assertion of the “peaceful intentions” of the Nazi war machine. In a few brief months [Japan strikes] at Pearl Harbor, and the Germans declare war against those for whom they said they cherished “only the friendliest of feelings.”

Tools of Propaganda Suggestion/Stimulation Use of hints, insinuation or indirect statements Appeal to the known desires of the audience Key words and slogans, symbols

Analyzing Propaganda What is the source of the propaganda? What is its authority? What purposes prompted it? Whom will it benefit? What does it really say?