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  • Plays On Emotions

    Propaganda plays on human emotions—fear, hope, anger, frustration, sympathy—to direct audiences toward the desired goal. Hitler argued that the successful propagandist had to understand how to psychologically tailor messages to the public's emotions in order to win people over.

    Attacks Opponents

    Propaganda can serve as a form of political and social warfare to identify and vilify opponents. It can call into question the legitimacy, credibility, accuracy, and even the character of one’s opponents and their ideas. Nazi propagandists contributed to the implementation of the regime’s policies by publicly identifying groups for exclusion, justifying their outsider status, and inciting hatred or cultivating indifference.

    Advertises a Cause

    Adolf Hitler likened propaganda to political advertising: it had to distinguish the party, cause, or individual from their competitors. The Nazis branded themselves and their leader as young, patriotic, political outsiders who alone were capable of reforming Germany. They painted other political parties as special interest groups while portraying the Nazi Party as an inclusive movement representing all non-Jewish Germans, regardless of class, religion, or region.

    Targets Desired Audiences

    Effective propaganda often times conveys messages, themes, and language that appeal directly, and many times exclusively, to specific and distinct segments—and even sub-segments—of the population. Propagandists create messages that appeal directly to the needs, hopes, and fears of the targeted groups. The Nazi Party promoted itself as an inclusive political movement that represented all non-Jewish Germans, regardless of class, gender, religion, or region.

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BACKGROUND INFORMATION:

The Nazi Party Central Propaganda Directorate produced this poster targeting the German public with their “slogan of the week” for March 11, 1940, Dafür kämpfen wir—für das Brot unserer Kinder!! (Why we fight—for our children’s bread!!). This slogan was released when Germany had already occupied much of Poland, and within ten days of its invasion of western Europe. [SOURCE: USHMM Collection]

THIS IS AN EXAMPLE OF:

Plays on emotions

THIS IS PROPAGANDA BECAUSE:

In this poster, by emphasizing that the war was not for territory but to protect German children, the Nazi Propaganda Directorate sought to justify Germany's actions as defensive, to preserve the nation's future. This poster concealed the Nazis’ aggressive foreign policy and war behind an emotional assertion that the German regime justly stood to protect and defend the youth of Germany.

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