propaganda timeline

  • Jul 4, 1501

    propaganda in the printing press

    propaganda in the printing press
    After the invention of the printing press, it became possible to quickly and easily produce posters and books. Prior to this development, however, the majority of propaganda was spread by word of mouth. The printing press enabled the propagandist to quickly produce mass amounts of posters with one intended effect, a form of propaganda much less risky and difficult than oral communication.
  • first radio

    first radio
    propaganda was again bolstered by the invention of the radio. The ability to communicate orally with large amounts of people in a very small amount of time.
  • begaing

    begaing
    Propaganda really came of age during World War I. It grew out of what proved to be a tragic mismatch. Technology in 1914 had leapt ahead of military tactics and strategy.
  • world wor 3

    world wor 3
    the history of propaganda beginning with World War I. We will follow the thread of how the Nazis developed and used it. They were exceptionally good at propaganda, and they can provide us with frightening example of its darkest side.
  • what happens with hoover

    what happens with hoover
    We know that Herbert Hoover won the election and became President, but life under Herbert Hoover didn't turn out the way the poster promised. The 1929 stock market crash and the Great Depression followed, so not many folks found happiness in those red-roofed houses.
  • The begaining of propaganda

    The begaining of propaganda
    As they were campaigning for public office in 1932 in Germany, the National Socialist German Worker's Party - commonly known as the Nazi party - sought to present itself as the purveyor of positive values and good intentions. This poster with its wholesome image of an ideal German family is a good example of propaganda
  • hat on the gews

    hat on the gews
    Victor Klemperer, a professor of Romance language who was fired from his teaching position in Dresden in 1935 because he was Jewish, and spent the war years with his "Aryan-born" wife writing daily in his diary
  • Hitler

    Hitler
    We'll turn now to the dark side. Powerful images and associations have often been used to send negative messages - images and emotional links that promote disrespect, distrust, hatred - and the Nazis became masters at the use of this very destructive propaganda. This poster for the 1937 film Der ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew), a Nazi propaganda film that was an unrelenting assault on Jews, is a good example.
  • hoover

    hoover
    When Herbert Hoover ran for President in 1928, one of his posters depicted the American dream as a house and a car in a seemingly idyllic suburban neighborhood. At the time, the billowing smoke stacks on the sides of the poster would not have been seen as an environmental problem but rather as the symbol of progress, a strong economy, jobs, and good pay checks.
  • the good and bad

    the good and bad
    So, we have touched on propaganda as appealing to emotions rather than reason, as well as the use of both positive and negative associations, the cultural substratum of stereotypes and bias that serve as a foundation for much propaganda. We have opened the door en route to how human beings tend to gravitate toward unfounded generalizations and groupings
  • media

    media
    introduction of the Internet and long-distance communication as enabled further increases in propaganda. In an age where we are increasingly bombarded by propaganda from a variety of media.
  • Some of the messages are designed to manipulate us without our knowing it.

    Some of the messages are designed to manipulate us without our knowing it.
    this type of propaganda is to manipulate. While some of the most disturbing kinds of propaganda originated during 20th century wars.
  • My opinoin on the meaning of properganda

    My opinoin on the meaning of properganda
    To me propaganda is just a big word to say, someone is inforsing there own opinoin about something to others to try and change thair mind. It is also not just bad but is just as good. it just dippens on how you use it.
  • It is an adiction to man kind

    It is an adiction to man kind
    propaganda is not so easily put aside. its effective techniques and insights into human nature. It is often difficult to tell where one ends and the other begins.
  • gews

    gews
    The nineteenth century was a period when Jews in many parts of Europe were liberated. Policies of toleration were endorsed by many countries. This was certainly true in most of Germany, where Jews had been largely integrated into every town and city. Jews occupied positions in most professions and were largely very successful.
  • Munic

    Munic
    The Nazis confiscated all the art from German museums and artists that they thought was "degenerate" and, as bizarre as it seems, they put together a major free exhibition to travel throughout Germany, beginning in Munich in July 1937. They intended the exhibition to be seen by as large an audience as possible. They believed that their presentation of the art and their commentary about it would persuade the "Volk" of how corrupt and unacceptable it was and why it had to be eliminated.