When war erupted in 1914, the United States
... murderous aggressor. There must be no ambiguity about who the public is to hate." American propaganda was not the only source of anti-German feeling, but most historians agree that the CPI pamphlets went too far in portraying Germans as depraved, brutal aggressors. For example, in one CPI publicatio ...
... murderous aggressor. There must be no ambiguity about who the public is to hate." American propaganda was not the only source of anti-German feeling, but most historians agree that the CPI pamphlets went too far in portraying Germans as depraved, brutal aggressors. For example, in one CPI publicatio ...
Key themes of German propaganda
... “If one wants the spoken and heard word of the radio to realise a common will, it cannot be done only through transmitters and receivers; instead, a real human connection between sender and receiver must be established. The radio warden is the living bridge between the two, and in a larger sense, a ...
... “If one wants the spoken and heard word of the radio to realise a common will, it cannot be done only through transmitters and receivers; instead, a real human connection between sender and receiver must be established. The radio warden is the living bridge between the two, and in a larger sense, a ...
Nazi Propaganda
... press? Germany did not have national newspapers but, instead, had over 4,700 local newspapers. The controls implemented by the Nazis on the press were – • Anti-Nazi newspapers were shut down. • Jews were banned from owning or working for newspapers. • Daily instructions were given to the press remin ...
... press? Germany did not have national newspapers but, instead, had over 4,700 local newspapers. The controls implemented by the Nazis on the press were – • Anti-Nazi newspapers were shut down. • Jews were banned from owning or working for newspapers. • Daily instructions were given to the press remin ...
propaganda - International School of Toulouse, France
... •1913: 2 000 cinemas 200 in Berlin •Images from the front •Political and industrial elite •Coal and electricity for cinema 1917 –18 most essential during shortages •Army cinema: 900 field cinemas in 1917 ...
... •1913: 2 000 cinemas 200 in Berlin •Images from the front •Political and industrial elite •Coal and electricity for cinema 1917 –18 most essential during shortages •Army cinema: 900 field cinemas in 1917 ...
War and Propaganda - Stanford University
... the British of flying a neutral flag (especially American) when in the declared war zone. The artist chose to depict one of the most well known British merchant ships, the Lusitania, to represent the entire merchant navy. Ironically, the Lusitania would end up being torpedoed two months later. After ...
... the British of flying a neutral flag (especially American) when in the declared war zone. The artist chose to depict one of the most well known British merchant ships, the Lusitania, to represent the entire merchant navy. Ironically, the Lusitania would end up being torpedoed two months later. After ...
Document
... Hitler had already had full control over NSDAP (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, in English, National Socialist German Workers’ Party, also known as Nazi Party) by 1920’s.1 Shortly after Hitler gained power within party, the dictatorship he tries to establish can be easily observed re ...
... Hitler had already had full control over NSDAP (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, in English, National Socialist German Workers’ Party, also known as Nazi Party) by 1920’s.1 Shortly after Hitler gained power within party, the dictatorship he tries to establish can be easily observed re ...
homework helpsheet / revision file
... reminder of their duties in wartime. In August 1914, the British expeditionary force of 100,000 men was sent to Belgium to resist the German invaders. Compared to European countries this was a tiny force and it soon became clear that the British army would have to become bigger than it had ever been ...
... reminder of their duties in wartime. In August 1914, the British expeditionary force of 100,000 men was sent to Belgium to resist the German invaders. Compared to European countries this was a tiny force and it soon became clear that the British army would have to become bigger than it had ever been ...
German Experiences During WWII Project
... the Dachau Camp. Describes his only encounter with Allied aircraft. Recalls scarcity of troops and equipment as Germany began losing the war, and numerous transfers just before it surrendered. Describes conditions in the Bad Aibling prisoner of war camp. Feels Nuremberg trials were justified but sho ...
... the Dachau Camp. Describes his only encounter with Allied aircraft. Recalls scarcity of troops and equipment as Germany began losing the war, and numerous transfers just before it surrendered. Describes conditions in the Bad Aibling prisoner of war camp. Feels Nuremberg trials were justified but sho ...
Propaganda Posters
... This recruitment poster for the 163rd Battalion depicts a Canadian infantry soldier standing shoulder to shoulder with a French soldier. This image, made an appeal to French-Canadians’ illustrious military history with specific references to famous soldiers, including the Marquis de Montcalm, who ha ...
... This recruitment poster for the 163rd Battalion depicts a Canadian infantry soldier standing shoulder to shoulder with a French soldier. This image, made an appeal to French-Canadians’ illustrious military history with specific references to famous soldiers, including the Marquis de Montcalm, who ha ...
Teacher`s Guide
... for another six or seven months…And whatever class consciousness or social status might still be left…the Wehrmacht (German armed forces) will take care of that.” – Adolf Hitler (1938) From the 1920s onwards, the Nazi Party targeted German youth as a special audience for its propaganda messages. The ...
... for another six or seven months…And whatever class consciousness or social status might still be left…the Wehrmacht (German armed forces) will take care of that.” – Adolf Hitler (1938) From the 1920s onwards, the Nazi Party targeted German youth as a special audience for its propaganda messages. The ...
Appetizers (Causes)
... Make a mind map of causes of World War I. Write a news article on the causes. Create a comic strip on the causes. Write an interview with an eyewitness to the death of the ArchDuke Francis Ferdinand. ...
... Make a mind map of causes of World War I. Write a news article on the causes. Create a comic strip on the causes. Write an interview with an eyewitness to the death of the ArchDuke Francis Ferdinand. ...
Germany, c.1919-1945 - Sample scheme of work and lesson
... Each Scheme of Work and set of sample Lesson Plans is provided in Word format – so that you can use it as a foundation to build upon and amend the content to suit your teaching style and students’ needs. The Scheme of Work and sample Lesson Plans provide examples of how to teach this unit and the te ...
... Each Scheme of Work and set of sample Lesson Plans is provided in Word format – so that you can use it as a foundation to build upon and amend the content to suit your teaching style and students’ needs. The Scheme of Work and sample Lesson Plans provide examples of how to teach this unit and the te ...
Propaganda Notes
... men without work. Millions of children without a future. Save the German family. Vote for Adolf Hitler!“ How does the imagery (facial expressions, position of subjects, colors) aid the message? ...
... men without work. Millions of children without a future. Save the German family. Vote for Adolf Hitler!“ How does the imagery (facial expressions, position of subjects, colors) aid the message? ...
Nazi Poster Propaganda
... Its Role in Hitler’s Rise to and Consolidation of Power The Nazi propaganda machine is famous for its complexity and effectiveness, but the impact of posters is sometimes overlooked, especially those before World War II. The propaganda posters were an unavoidable part of daily life for the German po ...
... Its Role in Hitler’s Rise to and Consolidation of Power The Nazi propaganda machine is famous for its complexity and effectiveness, but the impact of posters is sometimes overlooked, especially those before World War II. The propaganda posters were an unavoidable part of daily life for the German po ...
CHAPTER 6 Nationalism and Ultranationalism
... leader. One of Stalin’s first acts was to confiscate land owned by farmers and create collective farms owned by the state. Those who objected were executed, and an estimated five million people were deported to forcedlabour camps in Siberia or Central Asia. Stalin wanted to replace the loyalties of ...
... leader. One of Stalin’s first acts was to confiscate land owned by farmers and create collective farms owned by the state. Those who objected were executed, and an estimated five million people were deported to forcedlabour camps in Siberia or Central Asia. Stalin wanted to replace the loyalties of ...
Teacher`s Guide
... • African American girls in movies are portrayed as more violent than white girls. • Of 1,026 girls ages 14 to 17 who were polled, 74% said most girls their ages used social networking sites to make themselves look cooler than they are and 41% admitted they’d done this themselves. The same study al ...
... • African American girls in movies are portrayed as more violent than white girls. • Of 1,026 girls ages 14 to 17 who were polled, 74% said most girls their ages used social networking sites to make themselves look cooler than they are and 41% admitted they’d done this themselves. The same study al ...
The visual arts influence in Nazi Germany
... educated by the authority, even though the education with shocked visual images that will influence young German’s physical and psychological health, there was no doubt that Nazi ideology will stay in young German’s mind for longtime. For the whole nation, Nazi Youth also was a significant social ba ...
... educated by the authority, even though the education with shocked visual images that will influence young German’s physical and psychological health, there was no doubt that Nazi ideology will stay in young German’s mind for longtime. For the whole nation, Nazi Youth also was a significant social ba ...
PROPAGANDA ANALYSIS
... What offers did I make them! How I begged them to be reasonable! I begged them to see reason. My speeches were all governed by the one idea: it must be possible to find a method for a peaceful solution. What we are doing is making a sacrifice in the interest of peace. We make this sacrifice, but we, ...
... What offers did I make them! How I begged them to be reasonable! I begged them to see reason. My speeches were all governed by the one idea: it must be possible to find a method for a peaceful solution. What we are doing is making a sacrifice in the interest of peace. We make this sacrifice, but we, ...
Stab-in-the-back myth
The stab-in-the-back myth (German: Dolchstoßlegende, pronounced [ˈdɔlçʃtoːsleˌɡɛndə]) was the notion, widely believed in right-wing circles in Germany after 1918, that the German Army did not lose World War I but was instead betrayed by the civilians on the home front, especially the republicans who overthrew the monarchy. Advocates denounced the German government leaders who signed the Armistice on November 11, 1918, as the ""November Criminals"" (German: Novemberverbrecher).When the Nazis came to power in 1933 they made the legend an integral part of their official history of the 1920s, portraying the Weimar Republic as the work of the ""November criminals"" who used the stab in the back to seize power while betraying the nation. The Nazi propaganda depicted Weimar as ""a morass of corruption, degeneracy, national humiliation, ruthless persecution of the honest 'national opposition'—fourteen years of rule by Jews, Marxists, and 'cultural Bolsheviks', who had at last been swept away by the National Socialist movement under Adolf Hitler and the victory of the 'national revolution' of 1933"".Scholars inside and outside Germany unanimously reject the notion, pointing out the German army was out of reserves and was being overwhelmed in late 1918. To many Germans, the expression ""stab in the back"" was evocative of Richard Wagner's 1876 opera Götterdämmerung, in which Hagen murders his enemy Siegfried with a spear in his back.