Rise of Dictators: Stalin
... only for a limited number of days. Soviet history rewritten to provide himself a more significant role in the revolution. He also wrote a book of his life, called “A short history of USSR.” 6. News: mass media and radio 7. Youth groups: Young people were encouraged to learn trades and engage in acti ...
... only for a limited number of days. Soviet history rewritten to provide himself a more significant role in the revolution. He also wrote a book of his life, called “A short history of USSR.” 6. News: mass media and radio 7. Youth groups: Young people were encouraged to learn trades and engage in acti ...
On Regulating International Propoganda: A Plea for Moderate Aims
... incite violence and raise tensions in international relations and that the technology of propaganda increasingly threatens to manipulate human beings in dangerous directions that may not even reflect their conscious values. 5 ...
... incite violence and raise tensions in international relations and that the technology of propaganda increasingly threatens to manipulate human beings in dangerous directions that may not even reflect their conscious values. 5 ...
“It`s really, uh, sharp, don`t you think? you know
... misleading information to further a political cause. Derived from the Latin root propagand, which means “that which ought to be spread,” the word took on its current meaning during World War I, when the first attempts were made to sway public opinion through the media. Discussion questions: How many ...
... misleading information to further a political cause. Derived from the Latin root propagand, which means “that which ought to be spread,” the word took on its current meaning during World War I, when the first attempts were made to sway public opinion through the media. Discussion questions: How many ...
Propaganda and Public Diplomacy in the Information Age
... Interestingly, while Americans appear to be against propaganda because of its content, they appear to define propaganda by its source, or who disseminates it. Coincidentally, the term entered American popular parlance tied to sinister foreign sources, “Nazi propaganda,” and later, “Communist propaga ...
... Interestingly, while Americans appear to be against propaganda because of its content, they appear to define propaganda by its source, or who disseminates it. Coincidentally, the term entered American popular parlance tied to sinister foreign sources, “Nazi propaganda,” and later, “Communist propaga ...
Grade 8-12 - Museum of History and Holocaust Education
... Use your work from lesson 4 to determine which country produced each poster during WWII. Then, compare propaganda posters from various countries. Look closely at the kinds of images used, language, colors, and the intended message. What similarities and differences do you see? If you didn’t know, wo ...
... Use your work from lesson 4 to determine which country produced each poster during WWII. Then, compare propaganda posters from various countries. Look closely at the kinds of images used, language, colors, and the intended message. What similarities and differences do you see? If you didn’t know, wo ...
What is Propaganda?
... If your words might lack credibility in some way, borrow the credibility of others by getting the testimony of trusted others. Use celebrities and public personalities who have well established and trusted public brands. Use experts, clerics, police, scientists and others whose title is respected, e ...
... If your words might lack credibility in some way, borrow the credibility of others by getting the testimony of trusted others. Use celebrities and public personalities who have well established and trusted public brands. Use experts, clerics, police, scientists and others whose title is respected, e ...
4. Harold Lasswell and Walter Lippmann
... • Organized corps of speakers to give speeches (4min men) • US public believed propaganda was an insidious force if left unchecked • Scholarly attention was attracted to effects of persuasive messages • Research dwindled after 1940s because • Private foundations and the federal government were more ...
... • Organized corps of speakers to give speeches (4min men) • US public believed propaganda was an insidious force if left unchecked • Scholarly attention was attracted to effects of persuasive messages • Research dwindled after 1940s because • Private foundations and the federal government were more ...
MEDIA STUDIES 120 FINAL EXAM
... In 2011, the Best Buy ran an ad staring Ozzy Osborne and Justin Bieber using the propaganda technique of ______________ to help sell their “Buy Back Program” by first showing a 3G phone, then a 4G, a 5G and finally a 6G phone. Presently, 5G and 6G phones don’t exist and no one knows for sure if they ...
... In 2011, the Best Buy ran an ad staring Ozzy Osborne and Justin Bieber using the propaganda technique of ______________ to help sell their “Buy Back Program” by first showing a 3G phone, then a 4G, a 5G and finally a 6G phone. Presently, 5G and 6G phones don’t exist and no one knows for sure if they ...
Chapter Ten: Critical Reading
... (There’s no way to prove this statement because two people can look at the same building and come to different conclusions about its beauty. Ugly is a value word, a word we use to express a value judgment. Value or judgment words are signals that an opinion is being expressed.) ...
... (There’s no way to prove this statement because two people can look at the same building and come to different conclusions about its beauty. Ugly is a value word, a word we use to express a value judgment. Value or judgment words are signals that an opinion is being expressed.) ...
Are you the victim of advertising propaganda? Can you complete the
... 2. Watch the short commercial clip – #1 and #13 are a little longer. After watching the first 30 seconds, if you know the answer, you don’t have to watch the rest. 3. Fill in the type of propaganda that is being used. Some will have two, others may have one. 4. Explain why you picked that answer. ...
... 2. Watch the short commercial clip – #1 and #13 are a little longer. After watching the first 30 seconds, if you know the answer, you don’t have to watch the rest. 3. Fill in the type of propaganda that is being used. Some will have two, others may have one. 4. Explain why you picked that answer. ...
Critical Reading
... • False comparison assumes that two things being compared are more alike than they really are. It didn’t hurt your grandfather to get to work without a car, and it won’t hurt you either. ...
... • False comparison assumes that two things being compared are more alike than they really are. It didn’t hurt your grandfather to get to work without a car, and it won’t hurt you either. ...
Propaganda Techniques
... • Please review the essays and open-ended prompts you have had returned to you today. – Please list at least two things you have done consistently well in your writing. – Please list two areas you need to improve in your writing. – Please count up all the Do Now since 11/ 10/ 2014 and write it down ...
... • Please review the essays and open-ended prompts you have had returned to you today. – Please list at least two things you have done consistently well in your writing. – Please list two areas you need to improve in your writing. – Please count up all the Do Now since 11/ 10/ 2014 and write it down ...
THE QUESTIONS—Do on a separate page, please
... 9. How did Czar Nicholas II feel about democracy? 10. What were the working conditions in Russia like with Nicholas II as a leader? 11. What was Bloody Sunday? Why might it be significant? 12. Explain why Nicholas II was either an effective or poor leader? 13. What became of this Czar and his family ...
... 9. How did Czar Nicholas II feel about democracy? 10. What were the working conditions in Russia like with Nicholas II as a leader? 11. What was Bloody Sunday? Why might it be significant? 12. Explain why Nicholas II was either an effective or poor leader? 13. What became of this Czar and his family ...
The Art of Rhetoric
... without fully analyzing how valid the claim is. O Often Pathos creates an emotional response such as fear, love, patriotism, hatred, joy, humor, guilt. O Most common use of Pathos involves appeal to the opposite sex. O Sometimes an advertisement will pull on the heartstrings. O Pathos can work in th ...
... without fully analyzing how valid the claim is. O Often Pathos creates an emotional response such as fear, love, patriotism, hatred, joy, humor, guilt. O Most common use of Pathos involves appeal to the opposite sex. O Sometimes an advertisement will pull on the heartstrings. O Pathos can work in th ...
USHMM State of Deception Webquest
... Task 6: Click on the THEMES link at the top of the page and go to the WRITING THE NEWS theme. Complete the following tasks and answer the questions: A. On page 5, click on the Explore in Depth link to learn about the People’s Radio and how it was used for propaganda purposes. Make sure your sound is ...
... Task 6: Click on the THEMES link at the top of the page and go to the WRITING THE NEWS theme. Complete the following tasks and answer the questions: A. On page 5, click on the Explore in Depth link to learn about the People’s Radio and how it was used for propaganda purposes. Make sure your sound is ...
Propaganda WHAT?
... journalists, television personalities, and others to accomplish their desired ends. 0 These techniques persuade us not through the giveand-take of argument and debate, but through manipulating symbols and basic human emotions. ...
... journalists, television personalities, and others to accomplish their desired ends. 0 These techniques persuade us not through the giveand-take of argument and debate, but through manipulating symbols and basic human emotions. ...
Road to Independence and the American Revolution
... 2. Violation of rights is permission to overthrow gov’t e. July 2, 1776 voted on resolution – 12 colonies voted (NY did not vote – later support) f. Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence – approved July 4, 1776 g. Declaration of Independence – 4 sections outlining creation of new nation i. Explain ...
... 2. Violation of rights is permission to overthrow gov’t e. July 2, 1776 voted on resolution – 12 colonies voted (NY did not vote – later support) f. Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence – approved July 4, 1776 g. Declaration of Independence – 4 sections outlining creation of new nation i. Explain ...
Propaganda during World War II
... represents the Christian Church. The flag represents the nation. Cartoons like Uncle Sam represent a consensus of public opinion. ...
... represents the Christian Church. The flag represents the nation. Cartoons like Uncle Sam represent a consensus of public opinion. ...
Kelly, Lisa unit - Teachers Institute of Philadelphia
... (Advertising Age) Politics, Advertising and Citizenship It's not just advertisers that attempt to manipulate our students. Our lives are changed by decisions made by lawmakers, many of whom we elect on the basis of messages delivered to us via the media. To be well-informed participants in the polit ...
... (Advertising Age) Politics, Advertising and Citizenship It's not just advertisers that attempt to manipulate our students. Our lives are changed by decisions made by lawmakers, many of whom we elect on the basis of messages delivered to us via the media. To be well-informed participants in the polit ...
Part 2: Introduction to Propaganda Techniques
... Makes the best case for the product and makes the worst case for the alternative. Only uses facts that support their product and tries to convince audience that this product is the only solution. Hardest technique to detect because not all information is given. Audience has to make an inform ...
... Makes the best case for the product and makes the worst case for the alternative. Only uses facts that support their product and tries to convince audience that this product is the only solution. Hardest technique to detect because not all information is given. Audience has to make an inform ...
Propaganda — who, us? The Australian Government
... ‘predetermined ends’, whether harmful or beneficial (1939: 15). Howard’s letter, in encouraging Australians to ‘be alert … and report suspicious activity’ (2003: 1), seeks attitudinal and behavioural change. It instructs ‘you and your family and friends’ to ‘read the booklet’ and ‘heed the experts’ ...
... ‘predetermined ends’, whether harmful or beneficial (1939: 15). Howard’s letter, in encouraging Australians to ‘be alert … and report suspicious activity’ (2003: 1), seeks attitudinal and behavioural change. It instructs ‘you and your family and friends’ to ‘read the booklet’ and ‘heed the experts’ ...
Social Cognition - How do we think about the social world
... The Nazis had a department of propaganda Propaganda Techniques Use of stereotypes Substitution of names Pinpointing an enemy Appeals to higher authority Selection of facts Downright lying Repetition Assertion ...
... The Nazis had a department of propaganda Propaganda Techniques Use of stereotypes Substitution of names Pinpointing an enemy Appeals to higher authority Selection of facts Downright lying Repetition Assertion ...
Randal Marlin
Randal Marlin (born 1938 in Washington, D.C.) is a Canadian philosophy professor at Carleton University in Ottawa who specializes in the study of propaganda. He was educated at Princeton University, McGill University, the University of Oxford, Aix-Marseille University, and the University of Toronto. After receiving a Department of National Defence fellowship to study under propaganda scholar Jacques Ellul at Bordeaux in 1979–1980, he started a philosophy and mass communications class at Carleton called Truth and Propaganda, which has run annually ever since.One of the texts for this class is his 2002 book Propaganda and the Ethics of Persuasion, which examines historical, ethical, and legal issues relating to propaganda. The revised second edition, released in 2013, examines the Bush administration's use of propaganda based on fear to persuade Americans to support the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Marlin acknowledges that there are many definitions of propaganda, including favourable ones. However, his book reflects Ellul's view that propaganda suppresses individual freedom and autonomy.In 1998, Marlin published a book examining the public uproar following the appointment of a former separatist Quebec political candidate to the top administrator's post at the new Ottawa Hospital. The David Levine Affair: Separatist Betrayal or McCarthyism North? criticizes the Ottawa news media for fanning the flames of intolerance in their quest for higher circulations and audience ratings. The book also documents how the media kept the controversy going with a barrage of stories, columns, letters, editorials and radio phone-in shows. The David Levine Affair draws on Marlin's knowledge of propaganda techniques that play on stereotypes as well as pre-existing fears, suspicions and resentments to incite intense emotional reactions.Marlin's studies and teaching in the field of propaganda have earned him the nickname ""Ottawa's Orwell"".