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PROPAGANDA DURING WWI Introduction: Propaganda: information, ideas or rumours deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group, nation or movement (from dictionary.com) During WWI countries on all sides of the battle used various forms of propaganda to influence people back at home. On the following slides you will see various methods of propaganda used. Please make a note of reoccurring themes or images. After you have viewed each of the images carefully, complete the assignment at the end of this presentation. The assignment is due at the beginning of tomorrow’s class. Great Britain Britain entered the war on 4 August 1914. The possessor of a small professional army and without a policy of conscription she had urgent need of more men - many, many more men - for training within the British Expeditionary Force (BEF). Thus the government in London acted quickly in bringing out a stream of recruitment posters, including possibly the most famous of its type, featuring Lord Kitchener ("Your Country Wants You!"). Other posters followed in due course, many urging wartime economy. Others simply encouraged continued support for government policy, usually by whipping up indignation against the latest alleged outrages committed (invariably) by the German Army. France France had initiated its plan for the First World War some years before the event - via the ill-fated Plan XVII - and so had in place a government policy of conscription. Nevertheless when war broke out the French government was prompt in advertising for more men while simultaneously pleading the justice of the French cause. Germany Of the nations which went to war from 1914-18 Germany was arguably the best prepared. Along with France the German government had long planned for war. Whereas France was expecting a conflict with Germany and Austria-Hungary, Germany reckoned upon facing at least France in the west and Russia in the east: a formidable proposition. Thus Germany took great care in formulating its own war strategy - the Schlieffen Plan - which in the event failed to achieve its aim of knocking France out of the war in the west and then rushing back to the east to deal with Russia while the latter's painfully slow mobilisation proceeded apace. For all that, the Schlieffen Plan very nearly came to fruition. Conscription was a matter of standard policy in pre-war Germany. However the German government (presided over by Kaiser Wilhelm II) was not averse to appealing for more men, and for stating the patent justice of their decision to enter into a state of war. Russia Russia entered World War One on 1 August 1914 but did not remain until the conflict's ultimate conclusion in November 1918. The February - and then October - Revolutions of 1917 directly led to Russia's departure at the war, albeit at the cost of a punitive peace treaty (at Brest-Litovsk). Given the vast manpower resources at Russia's disposal - the Russian steamroller as it was commonly referred to - the government did not need to resort to recruitment posters. However propaganda was produced to encourage public investment in government bonds; and in the early Soviet era in decrying prominent anti-Bolshevik figures. Women adhere to the Co-operation Never Buy in a Private Shop When You Can Buy in a Co-operative The Tsar, The Priest and The Kulak The Enemy is at the Gates! Assignment: Answer the following questions using information from the previous slides. 1. Why did countries choose to use propaganda posters? 2. What common images or themes are present in each example? 3. How did each country attempt to appeal to the public? 4. Which country do you feel had the most effective posters? Why do you think so? 5. Would these posters be accepted today? Why or why not? 6. What surprised you the most about the images? 7. Who is the intended audience of these posters? 8. Choose one image and write 2-3 paragraphs analyzing the poster. Be sure to mention what the poster is trying to “say”, who it is directed at and how effective it is or isn’t. All images courtesy of www.firstworldwar.com