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Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda
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Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Propaganda

Deconstructing propaganda

Page 2: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Propaganda Denotation

• 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group, movement, institution, nation, etc.

• 2. The deliberate spreading of such information, rumors, etc.

• 3. The particular doctrines or principles propagated by an organization or movement.

Page 3: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

What is Propaganda?

Biased information Created to shape

public opinion and behavior

Simplifies complex issues or

ideas

Symbols, images, words, or music

Plays on emotions

Advertises a cause, organization, or movement and its opponents

Directs human action toward a

given goal

True, partially true, or blatantly false

information

Page 4: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Common Propaganda Techniques

• Bandwagon• Testimonial• Plain Folks• Transfer• Fear/Card Stacking• Logical Fallacies• Glittering Generalities

• Name-calling

Page 5: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Bandwagon

• An appeal to the subject to follow the crowd

Tries to convince the subject that one side is the winning side and that winning is inevitable

Appeals to a person’s desire to be on the winning side

• Appeals to “in crowd” mentality

• Fear of being left out

• Undesirable traits

Page 6: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Bandwagon

Page 7: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Testimonial

• Quotations or endorsements which attempt to connect a well-known or respectable person with a product or ideal. The intent to better “sell” the product or ideal

• Examples: Any celebrity endorsement: Weight Watchers uses Jennifer Hudson, The Kardashians for Pistachios; Jennifer Lopez for Fiat, Michael Jordan for Fruit of the Loom

Page 8: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Testimonial

Page 9: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Plain Folks

• An attempt to convince the public that his or her views reflect those of the “common person”

• I am “one of you” approach

The featured person tries to appear work for the benefit of the “common person”

• Example: Sarah Palin is a “soccer mom”. Bush clearing brush on his ranch. Joe the Plumber was a regular guy, a prominent politician eats at McDonald’s; an actress is photographed shopping for groceries

Page 10: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Plain Folks

Page 11: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Transfer

• An attempt to make the subject view a certain item in the same way as they view another item

• Used to transfer negative feelings for one object to another

• In politics, this technique is often used to transfer blame or bad feelings from one politician to another or from one group of people to another

• Example: Mac vs. PC

Page 12: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Transfer

Page 13: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Fear/Card Stacking

• Only presents information that is positive to an idea or proposal and omits information contrary to it

• While the information presented is true, other important information is purposely omitted

• Ads for medicine relate the benefits of the drug but fail to mention the negative or delivers them in a fast and incomprehensible fashion. Weight loss products do the same, they mention only success stories.

Page 14: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Card Stacking

Page 15: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Logical Fallacies

• An argument that sounds as if it makes sense but the premises given for the conclusion do not provide proper support for the argument.

• Example: Senator X wants to regulate the power industry. All Communist governments regulate their power industries. Senator X is a Communist.

• If the Supreme Court does not strike down Obamacare, millions of people will go out of business.

Page 16: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Logical Fallacy

Page 17: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Glittering Generalities

• Uses words that have different positive meaning for individual subjects, but are linked to highly valued concepts

• Words often used as glittering generalities are democracy, patriotism, family, honor, glory, love of country, and freedom

• Example: I stand for freedom: for a strong nation, unrivaled in the world. My opponent believes we must compromise on these ideals, but I believe they are our birthright, the legacy of our family.

Page 18: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Glittering Generalities

Page 19: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Name-calling

• Uses derogatory language or words that carry a negative connotation when describing an enemy or foe

• Attempts to arouse prejudice by labeling the target something that the public dislikes

• Example: commie, fascist, yuppie, academic. • My opponent is a flip-flop man who cannot make up

his mind. He changes mind with the breeze! How could anyone follow such a weak-willed flip-flopper?

Page 20: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Examples: Name Calling

Page 21: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Common Propaganda Traits

• Uses truths, half-truths, or lies • Omits information selectively • Simplifies complex issues or ideas • Plays on emotions • Advertises a cause • Attacks opponents • Targets desired audiences

Page 22: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Now It’s Your Turn

• Propaganda Project• 50 Points• Groups of Three• Poster, PowerPoint, or

Video• Due Monday 4/30 as a

presentation (use group rubric)

Know the Techniques:• Propaganda Techniques and

Classifications• Bandwagon• Testimonial• Plain Folks• Transfer• Fear/Card Stacking• Logical Fallacies• Glittering Generalities• Name-calling

Page 23: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Details: The Work• Working with a group of three:• Create a poster, a PowerPoint presentation, or a video that is• A combination of words and visuals (the visuals should dominate and the

message should be clear) that uses one of the classifications from the list above

• And several of the techniques outlined in the in-class PowerPoint (online in 4/26 homework).

• Please make sure you identify the technique you are employing somewhere inconspicuous on the work.

• Note: The idea is that you make this undesirable product desirable by “selling” it using one/or a combination of the classifications and techniques of propaganda.

• Make me want to buy it.• You are not lying, you are manipulating, omitting, glorifying….

Page 24: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Topics

• So what are you advertising? • That’s the difficult part – select an item, a place, a service that no

one would ever think about using. For example,– a tourism poster for Bakersfield– A print ad for rocks– Pre-popped bubble wrap– Plastic surgery for pets– Lindsay Lohan’s Academy of Celebrity Behavior– Ms Gerber’s Charm School

• If your produce is currently advertised, you don’t want to select that “thing.”

Page 25: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Research• Look up your chosen technique on YouTube and see how

others have employed it. The internet is full of current and past examples in a variety of media including television, print, even online advertising.

You must provide a Works Cited in hard copy form (submitted the day of the presentation). You must have at least FIVE sources in proper form.

Page 26: Propaganda Deconstructing propaganda. Propaganda Denotation 1. Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group,

Presentation

• On Monday you will present. Everyone must speak for a group total of 5 minutes.

• You have today and tomorrow to work in class.

Have funBe creative

Embrace the process and product.