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Propaganda in Nazi Germany

The propaganda used by the German Nazi Party in the years leading up to and during Adolf Hitler's dictatorship of Germany from 1933 to 1945 was a crucial instrument for acquiring and maintaining power, and for the implementation of Nazi policies.

Themes

Nazi propaganda promoted Nazi ideology by demonizing the enemies of the Nazi Party, notably Jews and communists, but also capitalists[1] and intellectuals. It promoted the values asserted by the Nazis, including heroic death, Führerprinzip (leader principle), Volksgemeinschaft (people's community), Blut und Boden (blood and soil) and pride in the Germanic Herrenvolk (master race). Propaganda was also used to maintain the cult of personality around Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, and to promote campaigns for eugenics and the annexation of German-speaking areas. After the outbreak of World War II, Nazi propaganda vilified Germany's enemies, notably the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and the United States, and in 1943 exhorted the population to total war.

History

Mein Kampf (1925)

Adolf Hitler devoted two chapters of his 1925 book Mein Kampf, itself a propaganda tool, to the study and practice of propaganda.[2] He claimed to have learned the value of propaganda as a World War I infantryman exposed to very effective British and ineffectual German propaganda.[3] The argument that Germany lost the war largely because of British propaganda efforts, expounded at length in Mein Kampf, reflected then-common German nationalist claims. Although untrue – German propaganda during World War I was mostly more advanced than that of the British – it became the official truth of Nazi Germany thanks to its reception by Hitler.[4]

Mein Kampf contains the blueprint of later Nazi propaganda efforts. Assessing his audience, Hitler writes in chapter VI:

Propaganda must always address itself to the broad masses of the people. (...) All propaganda must be presented in a popular form and must fix its intellectual level so as not to be above the heads of the least intellectual of those to whom it is directed. (...) The art of propaganda consists precisely in being able to awaken the imagination of the public through an appeal to their feelings, in finding the appropriate psychological form that will arrest the attention and appeal to the hearts of the national masses. The broad masses of the people are not made up of diplomats or professors of public jurisprudence nor simply of persons who are able to form reasoned judgment in given cases, but a vacillating crowd of human children who are constantly wavering between one idea and another. (...) The great majority of a nation is so feminine in its character and outlook that its thought and conduct are ruled by sentiment rather than by sober reasoning. This sentiment, however, is not complex, but simple and consistent. It is not highly differentiated, but has only the negative and positive notions of love and hatred, right and wrong, truth and falsehood.[5]

As to the methods to be employed, he explains:

Propaganda must not investigate the truth objectively and, in so far as it is favorable to the other side, present it according to the theoretical rules of justice; yet it must present only that aspect of the truth which is favorable to its own side. (...) The receptive powers of the masses are very restricted, and their understanding is feeble. On the other hand, they quickly forget. Such being the case, all effective propaganda must be confined to a few bare essentials and those must be expressed as far as possible in stereotyped formulas. These slogans should be persistently repeated until the very last individual has come to grasp the idea that has been put forward. (...) Every change that is made in the subject of a propagandist message must always emphasize the same conclusion. The leading slogan must, of course, be illustrated in many ways and from several angles, but in the end one must always return to the assertion of the same formula.[5]

Early Nazi Party (1919–1933)

Hitler put these ideas into practice with the reestablishment of the Völkischer Beobachter, a newspaper published by the Nazi Party (NSDAP) from December 1920 onwards, whose circulation reached 26,175 in 1929. It was joined in 1927 by Joseph Goebbels's Der Angriff, another unabashedly and crudely propagandistic paper.

During most of the Nazis' time in opposition, their means of propaganda remained limited. With little access to mass media, the party continued to rely heavily on Hitler and a few others speaking at public meetings until 1929.[6] One study finds that the Weimar government's use of pro-government radio propaganda slowed Nazi growth.[7] In April 1930, Hitler appointed Goebbels head of party propaganda. Goebbels, a former journalist and Nazi Party officer in Berlin, soon proved his skills. Among his first successes was the organization of riotous demonstrations that succeeded in having the American anti-war film All Quiet on the Western Front banned in Germany.[8]

In power (1933–1939)

 
A 1937 anti-Bolshevik Nazi propaganda poster. The translated caption: "Bolshevism without a mask – large anti-Bolshevik exhibition of the NSDAP Gauleitung Berlin from 6 November to 19 December 1937 in the Reichstag building".

A major political and ideological cornerstone of Nazi policy was the unification of all ethnic Germans living outside the Reich's borders (e.g. in Austria and Czechoslovakia) under one Greater Germany.[9] In Mein Kampf, Hitler denounced the pain and misery of ethnic Germans outside Germany, and declared the dream of a common fatherland for which all Germans must fight.[10] Throughout Mein Kampf, he pushed Germans worldwide to make the struggle for political power and independence their main focus, made official in the Heim ins Reich policy beginning in 1938.[11]

On 13 March 1933, Nazi Germany established a Ministry of Propaganda, appointing Joseph Goebbels as its Minister. Its goals were to establish enemies in the public mind: the external enemies which had imposed the Treaty of Versailles on Germany, and internal enemies such as Jews, Romani, homosexuals, Bolsheviks, and cultural trends including "degenerate art".

For months prior to the beginning of World War II in 1939, German newspapers and leaders had carried out a national and international propaganda campaign accusing Polish authorities of organizing or tolerating violent ethnic cleansing of ethnic Germans living in Poland.[12] On 22 August, Adolf Hitler told his generals:

I will provide a propagandistic casus belli. Its credibility doesn't matter. The victor will not be asked whether he told the truth.[13][14]

The main part of this propaganda campaign was the false flag Operation Himmler, which was designed to create the appearance of Polish aggression against Germany, in order to justify the invasion of Poland.[13][14][15]

Research finds that the Nazis' use of radio propaganda helped it consolidate power and enroll more party members.[7]

There are a variety of factors that increased the obedience of German soldiers in terms of following the Nazi orders that were given to them regarding Jews. Omer Bartov, a professor on subjects such as German Studies and European History, mentioned in his book, Hitler’s Army: Soldiers, Nazis, and War in the Third Reich, how German soldiers were told information that influenced their actions. Bartov mentioned that General Lemelson, a corps commander, explained to his German troops regarding their actions toward Jews, "We want to bring back peace, calm and order to this land…"[16] German leaders tried to make their soldiers believe that Jews were a threat to their society. Thus, German soldiers followed orders given to them and participated in the demonization and mass murders of Jews.[17] In other words, German soldiers saw Jews as a group that was trying to infect and take over their homeland. Omer Bartov's description of Nazi Germany explains the intense discipline and unity that the soldiers had which played a role in their willingness to obey orders that were given to them.[18] These feelings that German soldiers had toward Jews grew more and more as time went on as the German leaders kept pushing further for Jews to get out of their land as they wanted total annihilation of Jews.

At war (1939–1945)

 
Propaganda recruiting poster of 27th SS Volunteer Division Langemarck with title "Flemings all in the SS Langemarck!"
 
Wehrmacht soldiers dismantling Polish government insignia in Gdynia soon after the invasion of Poland in 1939.

Until the conclusion of the Battle of Stalingrad on 2 February 1943, German propaganda emphasized the prowess of German arms and the humanity German soldiers had shown to the peoples of occupied territories. Pilots of the Allied bombing fleets were depicted as cowardly murderers and Americans in particular as gangsters in the style of Al Capone. At the same time, German propaganda sought to alienate Americans and British from each other, and both these Western nations from the Soviet Union. One of the primary sources for propaganda was the Wehrmachtbericht, a daily radio broadcast from the High Command of the Wehrmacht, the OKW. Nazi victories lent themselves easily to propaganda broadcasts and were at this point difficult to mishandle.[19] Satires on the defeated, accounts of attacks, and praise for the fallen all were useful for Nazis.[20] Still, failures were not easily handled even at this stage. For example, considerable embarrassment resulted when the Ark Royal proved to have survived an attack that German propaganda had hyped.[19]

Goebbels instructed Nazi propagandists to describe the invasion of the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa) as the "European crusade against Bolshevism" and the Nazis then formed different units of the Waffen-SS consisting of mainly volunteers and conscripts.[21][22]

After Stalingrad, the main theme changed to Germany as the main defender of what they called "Western European culture" against the "Bolshevist hordes". The introduction of the V-1 and V-2 "vengeance weapons" was emphasized to convince Britons of the hopelessness of defeating Germany.

 
Nur für deutsche Fahrgäste ("Only for German Passengers"), a Nazi slogan used in occupied territories, mainly posted at entrances to parks, cafes, cinemas, theatres and other facilities.

On 23 June 1944, the Nazis permitted the Red Cross to visit the concentration camp Theresienstadt to dispel rumors about the Final Solution, which was intended to kill all Jews. In reality, Theresienstadt was a transit camp for Jews en route to extermination camps. In a sophisticated propaganda effort, fake shops and cafés were erected to imply that the Jews lived in relative comfort. The guests enjoyed the performance of a children's opera, Brundibar, written by inmate Hans Krása. The hoax was so successful for the Nazis that they went on to make a propaganda film Theresienstadt. The shooting of the film began on 26 February 1944. Directed by Kurt Gerron, it was meant to show how well the Jews lived under the "benevolent" protection of Nazi Germany. After the shooting, most of the cast, and even the filmmaker himself, were deported to the concentration camp of Auschwitz where they were murdered. Hans Fritzsche, who had been head of the Radio Chamber, was tried and acquitted by the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal.

Antisemitism during World War II

Antisemitic wartime propaganda served a variety of purposes. It was hoped that people in Allied countries would be persuaded that Jews should be blamed for the war. The Nazis also wished to ensure that German people were aware of the extreme measures being carried out against the Jews on their behalf, in order to incriminate them and thus guarantee their continued loyalty through fear by Nazi-conjectured scenarios of supposed post-war "Jewish" reprisals.[23][24] Especially from 1942 onwards,

the announcement that Jews were being exterminated served as a group unification factor to preclude desertion and force the Germans to continue fighting. Germans were fed the knowledge that too many atrocities had been committed, especially against the Jews, to allow for an understanding to be reached with the Allies.

— David Bankier (2002) The Use of Antisemitism in Nazi Wartime Propaganda[25]

Nazi media vilified arch-enemies of Nazi Germany as Jewish (Franklin Delano Roosevelt)[26] or in the cases of Josef Stalin and Sir Winston Churchill abject puppets of an international Jewish conspiracy intent on ruining Germany and Nazism.[27]

Problems in propaganda arose easily in this stage; expectations of success were raised too high and too quickly, which required explanation if they were not fulfilled, and blunted the effects of success, and the hushing of blunders and failures caused mistrust.[19] The increasing hardship of the war for the German people also called forth more propaganda that the war had been forced on the German people by the refusal of foreign powers to accept their strength and independence.[19] Goebbels called for propaganda to toughen up the German people and not make victory look easy.[19]

After Hitler's death, his successor as chancellor of Germany, Joseph Goebbels, informed the Reichssender Hamburg radio station. The station broke the initial news of Hitler's death on the night of 1 May; an announcer claimed he had died that afternoon as a hero fighting against Bolshevism. Hitler's successor as head of state, Karl Dönitz, further asserted that the United States forces were continuing the war solely to spread Bolshevism, a Marxist-Leninist form of communism, within Europe.[28]

Media

Books

The Nazis and sympathizers published many propaganda books. Most of the beliefs that would become associated with the Nazis, such as German nationalism, eugenics and antisemitism had been in circulation since the 19th century, and the Nazis seized on this body of existing work in their own publications.

The most notable is Hitler's Mein Kampf, detailing his beliefs.[29] The book outlines major ideas that would later culminate in World War II. It is heavily influenced by Gustave Le Bon's 1895 The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind, which theorized propaganda as a way to control the seemingly irrational behavior of crowds. Particularly prominent is the violent antisemitism of Hitler and his associates, drawing, among other sources, on the fabricated "Protocols of the Elders of Zion" (1897), which implied that Jews secretly conspired to rule the world. This book was a key source of propaganda for the Nazis and helped fuel their common hatred against the Jews during World War II.[30] For example, Hitler claimed that the international language Esperanto was part of a Jewish plot and makes arguments toward the old German nationalist ideas of "Drang nach Osten" and the necessity to gain Lebensraum ("living space") eastwards (especially in Russia). Other books such as Rassenkunde des deutschen Volkes ("Racial Science of the German People") by Hans Günther[31] and Rasse und Seele ("Race and Soul") by Dr. Ludwig Ferdinand Clauß [de][32] (published under different titles between 1926 and 1934)[33]: 394  attempt to identify and classify the differences between the German, Nordic, or Aryan type and other supposedly inferior peoples. These books were used as texts in German schools during the Nazi era.

The pre-existing and popular genre of Schollen-roman, or novel of the soil, also known as blood and soil novels,[34] was given a boost by the acceptability of its themes to the Nazis and developed a mysticism of unity.[35]

The immensely popular "Red Indian" stories by Karl May were permitted despite the heroic treatment of the hero Winnetou and "colored" races; instead, the argument was made that the stories demonstrated the fall of the Red Indians was caused by a lack of racial consciousness, to encourage it in the Germans.[36] Other fictional works were also adapted; Heidi was stripped of its Christian elements, and Robinson Crusoe's relationship to Friday was made a master-slave one.[37]

Children's books also made their appearance. In 1938, Julius Streicher published Der Giftpilz (The Poisonous Mushroom), a storybook that equated the Jewish people to poisonous mushrooms and aimed to educate children about the Jews. The book was an example of antisemitic propaganda and stated that "The following tales tell the truth about the Jewish poison mushroom. They show the many shapes the Jew assumes. They show the depravity and baseness of the Jewish race. They show the Jew for what he really is: The Devil in human form."[38]

Textbooks

"Geopolitical atlases" emphasized Nazi schemes, demonstrating the "encirclement" of Germany, depicting how the prolific Slav nations would cause the German people to be overrun, and (in contrast) showing the relative population density of Germany was much higher than that of the Eastern regions (where they would seek Lebensraum).[39] Textbooks would often show that the birth rate amongst Slavs was prolific compared to Germans.[40] Geography text books stated how crowded Germany had become.[41] Other charts would show the cost of disabled children as opposed to healthy ones, or show how two-child families threatened the birthrate.[42] Math books discussed military applications and used military word problems, physics and chemistry concentrated on military applications, and grammar classes were devoted to propaganda sentences.[43] Other textbooks dealt with the history of the Nazi Party.[44] Elementary school reading text included large amounts of propaganda.[45] Children were taught through textbooks that they were the Aryan master race (Herrenvolk) while the Jews were untrustworthy, parasitic and Untermenschen (inferior subhumans).[46] Course content and textbooks unnecessarily included information that was propagandistic, an attempt to sway the children's views from an early age.[47]

Maps showing the racial composition of Europe were banned from the classroom after many efforts that did not define the territory widely enough for party officials.[48]

Fairy tales were put to use, with Cinderella being presented as a tale of how the prince's racial instincts lead him to reject the stepmother's alien blood (present in her daughters) for the racially pure maiden.[49] Nordic sagas were likewise presented as the illustration of Führerprinzip, which was developed with such heroes as Frederick the Great and Otto von Bismarck.[50]

Literature was to be chosen within the "German spirit" rather than a fixed list of forbidden and required, which made the teachers all the more cautious[51] although Jewish authors were impossible for classrooms.[52] While only William Shakespeare's Macbeth and The Merchant of Venice were actually recommended, none of the plays were actually forbidden, even Hamlet, denounced for "flabbiness of soul."[53]

Biology texts, however, were put to the most use in presenting eugenic principles and racial theories; this included explanations of the Nuremberg Laws, which were claimed to allow the German and Jewish peoples to co-exist without the danger of mixing.[54] Science was to be presented as the most natural area for introducing the "Jewish Question" once teachers took care to point out that in nature, animals associated with those of their own species.[55]

Teachers' guidelines on racial instruction presented both the handicapped and Jews as dangers.[56] Despite their many photographs glamorizing the "Nordic" type, the texts also claimed that visual inspection was insufficient, and genealogical analysis was required to determine their types and report any hereditary problems.[57] However, the National Socialist Teachers League (NSLB) stressed that at primary schools, in particular, they had to work on only the Nordic racial core of the German Volk again and again and contrast it with the racial composition of foreign populations and the Jews.[46]

Books in occupied countries

In occupied France, the German Institute encouraged the translation of German works although chiefly German nationalists, not ardent Nazis, produced a massive increase in the sale of translated works.[58] The only books in English to be sold were English classics, and books with Jewish authors or Jewish subject matter (such as biographies) were banned, except for some scientific works.[59] Control of the paper supply allowed Germans the easy ability to pressure publishers about books.[59]

Comics

The Nazi-controlled government in German-occupied France produced the Vica comic book series during World War II as a propaganda tool against the Allied forces. The Vica series, authored by Vincent Krassousky, represented Nazi influence and perspective in French society, and included such titles as Vica Contre le service secret Anglais, and Vica défie l'Oncle Sam.[60]

Films

 
Leni Riefenstahl with Heinrich Himmler at Nuremberg in 1934
 
The Totenehrung (honouring of dead) at the 1934 Nuremberg Rally. SS leader Heinrich Himmler, Adolf Hitler and SA leader Viktor Lutze (from L to R) on the stone terrace in front of the Ehrenhalle (Hall of Honour) in the Luitpoldarena. In the background is the crescent-shaped Ehrentribüne (literally: tribune of honour).

The Nazis produced many films to promote their views, using the party's Department of Film for organizing film propaganda. An estimated 45 million people attended film screenings put on by the NSDAP.[61] Reichsamtsleiter Neumann declared that the goal of the Department of Film was not directly political in nature, but was rather to influence the culture, education, and entertainment of the general population.[61]

On 22 September 1933, a Department of Film was incorporated into the Chamber of Culture. The department controlled the licensing of every film prior to its production. Sometimes the government selected the actors for a film, financed the production partially or totally, and granted tax breaks to the producers. Awards for "valuable" films would decrease taxes, thus encouraging self-censorship among movie makers.[62]

Under Goebbels and Hitler, the German film industry became entirely nationalized. The National Socialist Propaganda Directorate, which Goebbels oversaw, had at its disposal nearly all film agencies in Germany by 1936. Occasionally, certain directors such as Wolfgang Liebeneiner were able to bypass Goebbels by providing him with a different version of the film than would be released. Such films include those directed by Helmut Käutner: Romanze in Moll (Romance in a Minor Key, 1943), Große Freiheit Nr. 7 (The Great Freedom, No. 7, 1944), and Unter den Brücken (Under the Bridges, 1945).

Schools were also provided with motion picture projectors because the film was regarded as particularly appropriate for propagandizing children.[63] Films specifically created for schools were termed "military education."[63]

Triumph des Willens (Triumph of the Will, 1935) by film-maker Leni Riefenstahl chronicled the Nazi Party Congress of 1934 in Nuremberg. It followed an earlier film of the 1933 Nuremberg Rally produced by Riefenstahl, Der Sieg des Glaubens. Triumph of the Will features footage of uniformed party members (though relatively few German soldiers), who are marching and drilling to militaristic tunes. The film contains excerpts from speeches given by various Nazi leaders at the Congress, including Adolf Hitler. Frank Capra used scenes from the film, which he described partially as "the ominous prelude of Hitler's holocaust of hate", in many parts of the United States government's Why We Fight anti-Axis seven-film series, to demonstrate what the personnel of the American military would be facing in World War II, and why the Axis had to be defeated.

During 1940 three antisemitic films were shown: The Rothschilds, Jud Süß and Der ewige Jude.[64]

Der ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew, 1940) was directed by Fritz Hippler at the insistence of Goebbels, though the writing is credited to Eberhard Taubert. The movie is done in the style of a feature-length documentary, the central thesis being the immutable racial personality traits that characterize the Jew as a wandering cultural parasite. Throughout the film, these traits are contrasted to the Nazi state ideal: while Aryan men find satisfaction in physical labour and the creation of value, Jews only find pleasure in money and a hedonist lifestyle. The movie is resolved with Hitler giving a speech hinting at the coming "Final Solution", his plan to exterminate millions of Jews.[65] One historian has noted that "so radical was the film's antisemitism that the Propaganda Ministry had doubts about showing it to the public... it was most successful amongst Party activists; the general public was less impressed".[66]

The main medium was Die Deutsche Wochenschau, a newsreel series produced for cinemas, from 1940. Newsreels were explicitly intended to portray German interests as successful.[67] Themes often included the virtues of the Nordic or Aryan type, German military and industrial strength, and the evils of the Nazi enemies.

Fine art

 
Arno Breker's sculptures of the Nordic man made him Hitler's favorite sculptor.[68]

By Nazi standards, fine art was not propaganda. Its purpose was to create ideals, for eternity.[69] This produced a call for heroic and romantic art, which reflected the ideal rather than the realistic.[48] Explicitly political paintings were very rare.[70] Still more rare were antisemitic paintings, because the art was supposed to be on a higher plane.[71] Nevertheless, selected themes, common in propaganda, were the most common topics of art.

Sculpture was used as an expression of Nazi racial theories.[72] The most common image was of the nude male, expressing the ideal of the Aryan race.[73] Nudes were required to be physically perfect.[74] At the Paris Exposition of 1937, Josef Thorak's Comradeship stood outside the German pavilion, depicting two enormous nude males, clasping hands and standing defiantly side by side, in a pose of defense and racial camaraderie.[48]

Landscape painting featured mostly heavily in the Greater German Art exhibition,[70] in accordance with themes of blood and soil.[75] Peasants were also popular images, reflecting a simple life in harmony with nature,[76] frequently with large families.[77] With the advent of war, war art came to be a significant though still not predominating proportion.[78]

The continuing of the German Art Exhibition throughout the war was put forth as a manifestation of German's culture.[79]

Magazines

In and after 1939, the Zeitschriften-Dienst was sent to magazines to provide guidelines on what to write for appropriate topics.[80] Nazi publications also carried various forms of propaganda.

Neues Volk was a monthly publication of the Office of Racial Policy, which answered questions about acceptable race relations.[81] While mainly focused on race relations, it also included articles about the strength and character of the Aryan race compared to Jews and other "defectives".[82]

The NS-Frauen-Warte, aimed at women, included such topics as the role of women in the Nazi state.[83] Despite its propaganda elements, it was predominantly a women's magazine.[84] It defended anti-intellectualism,[85] urged women to have children, even in wartime,[86][87] put forth what the Nazis had done for women,[88] discussed bridal schools,[89] and urged women to greater efforts in total war.[90]

Der Pimpf was aimed at boys, and contained both adventure and propaganda.[91]

Das deutsche Mädel, in contrast, recommended that girls take up hiking, tending the wounded, and preparing to care for children.[92] Far more than NS-Frauen-Warte, it emphasized the strong and active German woman.[84]

Signal

Signal was a propaganda magazine published by the Wehrmacht during World War II[93] and distributed throughout occupied Europe and neutral countries. Published from April 1940 to March 1945, "Signal" had the highest sales of any magazine published in Europe during the period—circulation peaked at 2.5 million in 1943. At various times, it was published in at least twenty languages. An English edition was distributed in the British Channel Islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, and Sark, which were occupied by the Wehrmacht during the war.

The promoter of the magazine was the chief of the Wehrmacht propaganda office, Colonel Hasso von Wedel. Its annual budget was 10 million Reichsmarks, roughly $2.5 million at the pre-war exchange rate.

The image that Signal transmitted was that of Nazi Germany and its New Order as the great benefactor of European peoples and of Western civilization in general. The danger of a Soviet invasion of Europe was strongly pointed out. The quality of the magazine itself was quite high, featuring complete reviews from the front lines rich in information and photos, even displaying a double center-page full-color picture. In fact, many of the most famous Second World War photos that are to be seen today come from Signal. The magazine contained little to no antisemitic propaganda, as the contents were mainly military.[94][95][96]

Newspapers

The Völkischer Beobachter ("People's Observer") was the official daily newspaper of the NSDAP since December 1920. It disseminated Nazi ideology in the form of brief hyperboles directed against the weakness of parliamentarism, the evils of Jewry and Bolshevism, the national humiliation of the Versailles Treaty and other such topics.[97] It was joined in 1926 by Der Angriff ("The Attack"), a weekly and later daily paper founded by Joseph Goebbels. It was mainly dedicated to attacks against political opponents and Jews – one of its most striking features were vehemently antisemitic cartoons by Hans Schweitzer – but also engaged in the glorification of Nazi heroes such as Horst Wessel.[6] The Illustrierter Beobachter was their weekly illustrated paper.[98]

Other Nazi publications included;

After Hitler's rise to power in 1933, all of the regular press came under complete Nazi editorial control through the policy of Gleichschaltung, and short-lived propaganda newspapers were also established in the conquered territories during World War II. Alfred Rosenberg was a key member of the Nazi Party who gained control of their newspaper which was openly praised by Hitler. However, Hitler was dissatisfied by Rosenberg's work and slandered Rosenberg behind his back, discrediting his work.[101]

Newspapers in occupied countries

In Ukraine, after Nazis cracked down on the papers, most papers printed only articles from German agencies, producing the odd effect of more anti-American and anti-British articles than anti-Communist ones.[102] They also printed articles about antecedents of German rule over Ukraine, such as Catherine the Great and the Goths.[102]

In Norway during the 1930s the newspaper Aftenposten was supportive of Nazi Germany, and after Norway was occupied in 1940 the newspaper was used by the Germans to spread propaganda. The editor was replaced by a member of Vidkun Quisling's government.[103]

Photography

 
Adolf Hitler rehearsing poses for his speeches in photos reportedly taken in 1927.

The Nazis used photographers to document events and promote ideology. Photographers included Heinrich Hoffmann and Hugo Jaeger. Hoffmann worked in his father's photographic shop and as a photographer in Munich from 1908. He joined the NSDAP on 6 April 1920. After Hitler took over the party in 1921, he named Hoffmann as his official photographer, a post he held for over a quarter-century. A photograph taken by Hoffmann in Munich's Odeonsplatz on 2 August 1914 shows a young Hitler among the crowds cheering the outbreak of World War I and was used in Nazi propaganda. Hitler and Hoffmann became close friends—in fact, when Hitler became the ruler of Germany, Hoffmann was the only man authorized to take official photographs of him. Hoffmann's photographs were published as postage stamps, postcards, posters, and picture books. Following Hoffmann's suggestion, both he and Hitler received royalties from all uses of Hitler's image (even on postage stamps), which made Hoffmann a millionaire. In 1933 he was elected to the Reichstag and in 1938 Hitler appointed him a 'Professor'.

 
Hitler's field headquarters, Hitler with staff, May or June 1940, Heinrich Hoffmann front row far right

Nine photographs taken by Hoffman reveal how Hitler rehearsed poses and his hand gestures. He asked Hoffmann to take pictures so that he could see how he looked while speaking. Egon Hanfstaengl, son of Hitler's one-time foreign press officer Ernst "Putzi" Hanfstaengl, said in a documentary, Fatal Attraction of Hitler: "He had that ability which is needed to make people stop thinking critically and just emote."[citation needed]

Posters

 
"We have only one goal... Victory at all costs!"
Parole der Woche 29 April 1942
 
Wochenspruch der NSDAP 11 January 1943 quotes Hermann Göring: "We do not want to leave to our children and descendants what we can do ourselves."

Poster art was a mainstay of the Nazi propaganda effort, aimed both at Germany itself and occupied territories. It had several advantages. The visual effect, being striking, would reach the viewer easily.[104] Posters were also, unlike other forms of propaganda, difficult to avoid.[105]

Imagery frequently drew on heroic realism.[106] Nazi youth and the SS were depicted monumentally, with lighting posed to produce grandeur.[106]

Parole der Woche wall newspapers were published by the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda. The first edition was distributed on 16 March 1936. Every week an estimated 125,000 posters were administered to the public from 1936 to 1943.[107] Word of the Week posters were politically skewed and meant to rally public opinion in support of the Nazi efforts. The posters set out to educate and unify the German people before and especially during World War II.

The posters were placed in train cars, buses, platforms, ticket windows – anywhere there was dense traffic flow. Very few individuals, at the time, owned a car; most biked, walked, or used public transportation daily. Exposure to the Word of the Week posters was high in German cities. The messages and Nazi ideologies "stared out at the mass public for a week at a time in tens of thousands of places German pedestrians were likely to pass in the course of a day".[107]

Jeffery Herf, author of The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda During World War II and the Holocaust, described the poster campaign as a "combination of a newspaper editorial, political leaflet, political poster, and tabloid journalism".[107] Adolf Hitler personally appointed artist Hans Schweitzer, known as Mjölnir, with the task of translating Nazi ideology into images for the wall newspaper.[108] The posters were 100 centimeters high and 212 centimeters wide.[107] The visual style of the posters was bold text and Nazi-influenced colors, it meant to capture the attention of the German passersby. The text was big so that several people could read it at the same time and from a distance of a few feet.[107]

The majority of the posters were centered on Jews and the Allied countries of Great Britain, the United States of America, and Russia. During the time period when antisemitic articles decreased in publications, the antisemitic rhetoric was ramped up in The Word of the Week posters. From 1941 to 1943 about twenty-five percent of The Word Of The Week posters included an attack on Jews.[107] The Jews were depicted as enemies because of their supposed economic war, capitalism, and connection to the Bolshevik revolution in Russia.[108] The Nazi regime fostered the idea that the Jews were the masterminds behind all oppositional political forces. Images often showed a Jewish figure positioned behind, or above, symbols of economic and political influence.[108] Additionally, it was also common to depict the Allied forces of Great Britain, the United States, and Russia as overtaken by Jewry.

Posters were also used in schools, depicting, for instance, an institution for the feeble-minded on one hand and houses on the other, to inform the students that the annual cost of this institution would build 17 homes for healthy families.[109]

Radio

Before Hitler came to power, he rarely used radio to connect with the public, and when he did so non-party newspapers were allowed to publish his speeches.[110] This changed soon after he came to power in 1933. Hitler's speeches became widely broadcast all over Germany, especially on the radio, itself introduced by the Ministry of Propaganda. They were shown in weekly newsreels and reprinted in large editions in books and pamphlets all across Germany.[110] Hitler's speeches became so significant to the Nazis that even restaurants and pubs were expected to have their radios on whenever he was delivering one, and in some cities public speakers were used so passersby could hear them.[110] The Nazis also sold cheap radios so that people could hear speeches at home. These were called the People's Receivers, and were sold for 76 marks, while cheaper versions were sold for 35 marks.[111] Nazi propaganda emphasized and portrayed his speeches so that their main points appeared in weekly posters and were all over Germany by the hundreds of thousands.[110]

Nazi propaganda also used radio as an important tool to promote genocide.[112]

Internal broadcasts

Recognising the importance of radio in disseminating the Nazi message, Goebbels approved a scheme whereby millions of cheap radio sets (the Volksempfänger) were subsidised by the government. In the "Radio as the Eighth Great Power"[113] speech, Goebbels proclaimed:

It would not have been possible for us to take power or to use it in the ways we have without the radio....It is no exaggeration to say that the German revolution, at least in the form it took, would have been impossible without the airplane and the radio. ...[Radio] reached the entire nation, regardless of class, standing, or religion. That was primarily the result of the tight centralization, the strong reporting, and the up-to-date nature of the German radio....Above all it is necessary to clearly centralize all radio activities, to place spiritual tasks ahead of technical ones,...to provide a clear worldview,

By the start of the Second World War, over 70% of German households had one of these radios, which were deliberately limited in range in order to prevent loyal citizens from considering other viewpoints in foreign broadcasts.[112] Radio broadcasts were also played over loudspeakers in public places and workplaces.[112]

In private homes, however, people could easily turn off the radio when bored and did so once the novelty of hearing the voice from a box wore off; this caused the Nazis to introduce many non-propaganda elements, such as music, advice and tips, serials and other entertainment.[114] This was accelerated during the war to prevent people from tuning in enemy propaganda broadcasts; though Goebbels claimed in his Das Reich article that it was to make the radio a good companion to the people, he admitted the truth in his diary.[115]

External broadcasts

 
William Joyce, who was "Lord Haw-Haw" to British wartime listeners, now under arrest, lies in an ambulance under armed guard before being taken from British Second Army Headquarters to a hospital.
 
Philippe Henriot in 1934, who later became a Vichy minister and broadcaster for the Nazis.

As well as domestic broadcasts, the Nazi regime used radio to deliver its message to both occupied territories and enemy states. One of the main targets was the United Kingdom, to which William Joyce broadcast regularly, gaining the nickname 'Lord Haw-Haw'. Joyce first appeared on German radio on 6 September 1939 reading the news in English but soon became noted for his often mischievous propaganda broadcasts.[116] Joyce was executed for treason in 1946. Although Joyce was the most notorious, and most regularly heard, of British propagandists, other broadcasters included Norman Baillie-Stewart, Jersey-born teacher Pearl Vardon, British Union of Fascists members Leonard Banning and Susan Hilton, Barry Payne Jones of the Link and Alexander Fraser Grant, whose show was aimed specifically at Scotland, also broadcasting through the 'New British Broadcasting Service'.[117]

Broadcasts were also made to the United States, notably by Robert Henry Best and 'Axis Sally' Mildred Gillars. Best, a freelance journalist based in Vienna, was initially arrested following the German declaration of war on the U.S. but soon became a feature on propaganda radio, attacking the influence of the Jews in the U.S. and the leadership of Franklin Delano Roosevelt,[118] who succeeded Winston Churchill in Nazi propaganda as "World-Enemy Number One".[119] Best was later sentenced to life imprisonment for treason, and died in prison in 1952. Gillars, a teacher in Germany, mostly broadcast on similar themes as well as peppering her speech with allegations of infidelity against the wives of servicemen. Her most notorious broadcast was the 'Vision of Invasion' radio play, broadcast immediately prior to D-Day, from the perspective of an American mother who dreamed that her soldier son died violently in Normandy.[120]

France also received broadcasts from Radio-Stuttgart, where Paul Ferdonnet, an antisemitic journalist, was the main voice during the Phoney War.[121] Following the occupation, Radio Paris and Radio-Vichy became the main organs of propaganda, with leading far-right figures such as Jacques Doriot, Philippe Henriot and Jean Hérold-Paquis regularly speaking in support of the Nazis. Others who broadcast included Gerald Hewitt, a British citizen who lived most of his life in Paris and had been associated with Action Française.[122]

Domestic broadcasters were also used to galvanise support for occupation in Belgium, where Ward Hermans regularly spoke in support of the Nazis from his base in Bremen,[123] and the Italian Social Republic, to where Giovanni Preziosi broadcast a vehemently antisemitic show from his base in Munich.[124] Pro-Nazi radio broadcasts in the Arabic language aired in North Africa, crafted with the help of Mohammad Amin al-Husayni and other Arab exiles in Berlin to highlight Arab nationalism. They recast Nazi racist ideology to target Jews alone, not all Semites. Downplaying Mussolini's operations in Africa, they touted the anti-colonialism of the Axis powers.[125][126]

Speakers

The Nazi Party relied heavily on speakers to make its propaganda presentations, most heavily before they came to power, but also afterwards. Hitler, in Mein Kampf, recounted that he had realized that it was not written matter but the spoken word that brought about changes, as people would not read things that they disagreed with, but would linger to hear a speaker.[127] Furthermore, speakers, having their audiences before them, could see their reactions and adjust accordingly, to persuade.[128] His own oratory was a major factor in his rise, and he despised those who came to read pre-written speeches.[129]

Such speakers were particularly important when the information put across was not desired to reach foreigners, who could access the mass media.[130] Schools were instituted to substitute for the political conflict that had formed the old speakers.[131] In 1939, Walter Tiessler [de], speaking of his own experience as an early speaker, urged that they continue.[132]

Sturmabteilung speakers were used, though their reliance on instinct sometimes offended well-educated audiences, but their blunt and folksy manner often had its own appeal.[133]

The ministry would provide such speakers with information, such as how to spin the problems on the eastern front,[134] or how to discuss the cuts in food rations.[135] The party propaganda headquarters, sent the Redner-Schnellinformation [Speakers' Express Information] out with guidelines for immediate campaigns, such as antisemitic campaigns and what information to present.[130]

Specific groups were targeted with such speakers. Speakers, for instance, were created specifically for Hitler Youth.[136] These would, among other things, lecture Hitler Youth and the BDM on the need to produce more children.[137]

Speakers often addressed political or military rallies, which were well-orchestrated events with banners and marching bands.[138]

Historiography

Nazi propaganda is a relatively recent topic of close study.[139] Historians of all persuasions, including Eastern Bloc writers, agree about its remarkable effectiveness.[139] Their assessment of its significance, however – whether it shaped or merely directed and exploited public opinion – is influenced by their approach to wider questions raised by the study of Nazi Germany, such as the question of whether the Nazi state was a fully totalitarian dictatorship, as argued by Hannah Arendt, or whether it also depended on a certain societal consensus.[140]

In addition to media archives, an important primary source for the study of the Nazi propaganda effort are the reports on civilian morale and public opinion that the Sicherheitsdienst and later the RMVP compiled from 1939 on. Another are the Deutschland-Berichte, reports gathered by underground agents of the Sopade that particularly dealt with German popular opinion.[141]

See also

References

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Bibliography

  • Bytwerk, Randall (2005). "The Argument for Genocide in Nazi Propaganda". Quarterly Journal of Speech. 91 (1): 37–62. doi:10.1080/00335630500157516. S2CID 144116639.
  • Herf, Jeffrey (2006). The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Ideology and Propaganda During World War II and the Holocaust. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02175-4.
  • Kershaw, Ian (25 October 2001). Hitler 1889–1936: Hubris. Penguin Books Limited. ISBN 978-0-14-192579-0.
  • Welch, David (1993). The Third Reich: Politics and Propaganda. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-93014-4.

Further reading

  • Herf, Jeffrey (2005). "The "Jewish War": Goebbels and the Antisemitic Campaigns of the Nazi Propaganda Ministry". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 19 (1): 51–80. doi:10.1093/hgs/dci003. S2CID 143944355.
  • Tyaglyy, M. I. (2004). "The Role of Antisemitic Doctrine in German Propaganda in the Crimea, 1941–1944". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 18 (3): 421–459. doi:10.1093/hgs/dch087. S2CID 144554463.

External links

  • – slideshow by Life magazine
  • Calvin University. German Propaganda Archive. Nazi and East German Propaganda Guide Page
  • "What is at Stake" by Joseph Goebbels German Propaganda Archive
  • Vica Nazi Propaganda Comics – Duke University Libraries Digital Collections
  • 2010 German Exhibit Shows Mass Appeal Of Nazi Ideology – audio report by NPR

propaganda, nazi, germany, propaganda, used, german, nazi, party, years, leading, during, adolf, hitler, dictatorship, germany, from, 1933, 1945, crucial, instrument, acquiring, maintaining, power, implementation, nazi, policies, joseph, goebbels, head, nazi, . The propaganda used by the German Nazi Party in the years leading up to and during Adolf Hitler s dictatorship of Germany from 1933 to 1945 was a crucial instrument for acquiring and maintaining power and for the implementation of Nazi policies Joseph Goebbels the head of Nazi Germany s Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda Contents 1 Themes 2 History 2 1 Mein Kampf 1925 2 2 Early Nazi Party 1919 1933 2 3 In power 1933 1939 2 4 At war 1939 1945 2 4 1 Antisemitism during World War II 3 Media 3 1 Books 3 1 1 Textbooks 3 1 2 Books in occupied countries 3 2 Comics 3 3 Films 3 4 Fine art 3 5 Magazines 3 5 1 Signal 3 6 Newspapers 3 6 1 Newspapers in occupied countries 3 7 Photography 3 8 Posters 3 9 Radio 3 9 1 Internal broadcasts 3 9 2 External broadcasts 3 10 Speakers 4 Historiography 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksThemes EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Themes in Nazi propaganda Nazi propaganda promoted Nazi ideology by demonizing the enemies of the Nazi Party notably Jews and communists but also capitalists 1 and intellectuals It promoted the values asserted by the Nazis including heroic death Fuhrerprinzip leader principle Volksgemeinschaft people s community Blut und Boden blood and soil and pride in the Germanic Herrenvolk master race Propaganda was also used to maintain the cult of personality around Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and to promote campaigns for eugenics and the annexation of German speaking areas After the outbreak of World War II Nazi propaganda vilified Germany s enemies notably the United Kingdom the Soviet Union and the United States and in 1943 exhorted the population to total war History EditMein Kampf 1925 Edit Adolf Hitler devoted two chapters of his 1925 book Mein Kampf itself a propaganda tool to the study and practice of propaganda 2 He claimed to have learned the value of propaganda as a World War I infantryman exposed to very effective British and ineffectual German propaganda 3 The argument that Germany lost the war largely because of British propaganda efforts expounded at length in Mein Kampf reflected then common German nationalist claims Although untrue German propaganda during World War I was mostly more advanced than that of the British it became the official truth of Nazi Germany thanks to its reception by Hitler 4 Mein Kampf contains the blueprint of later Nazi propaganda efforts Assessing his audience Hitler writes in chapter VI Propaganda must always address itself to the broad masses of the people All propaganda must be presented in a popular form and must fix its intellectual level so as not to be above the heads of the least intellectual of those to whom it is directed The art of propaganda consists precisely in being able to awaken the imagination of the public through an appeal to their feelings in finding the appropriate psychological form that will arrest the attention and appeal to the hearts of the national masses The broad masses of the people are not made up of diplomats or professors of public jurisprudence nor simply of persons who are able to form reasoned judgment in given cases but a vacillating crowd of human children who are constantly wavering between one idea and another The great majority of a nation is so feminine in its character and outlook that its thought and conduct are ruled by sentiment rather than by sober reasoning This sentiment however is not complex but simple and consistent It is not highly differentiated but has only the negative and positive notions of love and hatred right and wrong truth and falsehood 5 As to the methods to be employed he explains Propaganda must not investigate the truth objectively and in so far as it is favorable to the other side present it according to the theoretical rules of justice yet it must present only that aspect of the truth which is favorable to its own side The receptive powers of the masses are very restricted and their understanding is feeble On the other hand they quickly forget Such being the case all effective propaganda must be confined to a few bare essentials and those must be expressed as far as possible in stereotyped formulas These slogans should be persistently repeated until the very last individual has come to grasp the idea that has been put forward Every change that is made in the subject of a propagandist message must always emphasize the same conclusion The leading slogan must of course be illustrated in many ways and from several angles but in the end one must always return to the assertion of the same formula 5 Early Nazi Party 1919 1933 Edit Hitler put these ideas into practice with the reestablishment of the Volkischer Beobachter a newspaper published by the Nazi Party NSDAP from December 1920 onwards whose circulation reached 26 175 in 1929 It was joined in 1927 by Joseph Goebbels s Der Angriff another unabashedly and crudely propagandistic paper During most of the Nazis time in opposition their means of propaganda remained limited With little access to mass media the party continued to rely heavily on Hitler and a few others speaking at public meetings until 1929 6 One study finds that the Weimar government s use of pro government radio propaganda slowed Nazi growth 7 In April 1930 Hitler appointed Goebbels head of party propaganda Goebbels a former journalist and Nazi Party officer in Berlin soon proved his skills Among his first successes was the organization of riotous demonstrations that succeeded in having the American anti war film All Quiet on the Western Front banned in Germany 8 In power 1933 1939 Edit A 1937 anti Bolshevik Nazi propaganda poster The translated caption Bolshevism without a mask large anti Bolshevik exhibition of the NSDAP Gauleitung Berlin from 6 November to 19 December 1937 in the Reichstag building A major political and ideological cornerstone of Nazi policy was the unification of all ethnic Germans living outside the Reich s borders e g in Austria and Czechoslovakia under one Greater Germany 9 In Mein Kampf Hitler denounced the pain and misery of ethnic Germans outside Germany and declared the dream of a common fatherland for which all Germans must fight 10 Throughout Mein Kampf he pushed Germans worldwide to make the struggle for political power and independence their main focus made official in the Heim ins Reich policy beginning in 1938 11 On 13 March 1933 Nazi Germany established a Ministry of Propaganda appointing Joseph Goebbels as its Minister Its goals were to establish enemies in the public mind the external enemies which had imposed the Treaty of Versailles on Germany and internal enemies such as Jews Romani homosexuals Bolsheviks and cultural trends including degenerate art For months prior to the beginning of World War II in 1939 German newspapers and leaders had carried out a national and international propaganda campaign accusing Polish authorities of organizing or tolerating violent ethnic cleansing of ethnic Germans living in Poland 12 On 22 August Adolf Hitler told his generals I will provide a propagandistic casus belli Its credibility doesn t matter The victor will not be asked whether he told the truth 13 14 The main part of this propaganda campaign was the false flag Operation Himmler which was designed to create the appearance of Polish aggression against Germany in order to justify the invasion of Poland 13 14 15 Research finds that the Nazis use of radio propaganda helped it consolidate power and enroll more party members 7 There are a variety of factors that increased the obedience of German soldiers in terms of following the Nazi orders that were given to them regarding Jews Omer Bartov a professor on subjects such as German Studies and European History mentioned in his book Hitler s Army Soldiers Nazis and War in the Third Reich how German soldiers were told information that influenced their actions Bartov mentioned that General Lemelson a corps commander explained to his German troops regarding their actions toward Jews We want to bring back peace calm and order to this land 16 German leaders tried to make their soldiers believe that Jews were a threat to their society Thus German soldiers followed orders given to them and participated in the demonization and mass murders of Jews 17 In other words German soldiers saw Jews as a group that was trying to infect and take over their homeland Omer Bartov s description of Nazi Germany explains the intense discipline and unity that the soldiers had which played a role in their willingness to obey orders that were given to them 18 These feelings that German soldiers had toward Jews grew more and more as time went on as the German leaders kept pushing further for Jews to get out of their land as they wanted total annihilation of Jews At war 1939 1945 Edit Propaganda recruiting poster of 27th SS Volunteer Division Langemarck with title Flemings all in the SS Langemarck Wehrmacht soldiers dismantling Polish government insignia in Gdynia soon after the invasion of Poland in 1939 Until the conclusion of the Battle of Stalingrad on 2 February 1943 German propaganda emphasized the prowess of German arms and the humanity German soldiers had shown to the peoples of occupied territories Pilots of the Allied bombing fleets were depicted as cowardly murderers and Americans in particular as gangsters in the style of Al Capone At the same time German propaganda sought to alienate Americans and British from each other and both these Western nations from the Soviet Union One of the primary sources for propaganda was the Wehrmachtbericht a daily radio broadcast from the High Command of the Wehrmacht the OKW Nazi victories lent themselves easily to propaganda broadcasts and were at this point difficult to mishandle 19 Satires on the defeated accounts of attacks and praise for the fallen all were useful for Nazis 20 Still failures were not easily handled even at this stage For example considerable embarrassment resulted when the Ark Royal proved to have survived an attack that German propaganda had hyped 19 Goebbels instructed Nazi propagandists to describe the invasion of the Soviet Union Operation Barbarossa as the European crusade against Bolshevism and the Nazis then formed different units of the Waffen SS consisting of mainly volunteers and conscripts 21 22 After Stalingrad the main theme changed to Germany as the main defender of what they called Western European culture against the Bolshevist hordes The introduction of the V 1 and V 2 vengeance weapons was emphasized to convince Britons of the hopelessness of defeating Germany Nur fur deutsche Fahrgaste Only for German Passengers a Nazi slogan used in occupied territories mainly posted at entrances to parks cafes cinemas theatres and other facilities On 23 June 1944 the Nazis permitted the Red Cross to visit the concentration camp Theresienstadt to dispel rumors about the Final Solution which was intended to kill all Jews In reality Theresienstadt was a transit camp for Jews en route to extermination camps In a sophisticated propaganda effort fake shops and cafes were erected to imply that the Jews lived in relative comfort The guests enjoyed the performance of a children s opera Brundibar written by inmate Hans Krasa The hoax was so successful for the Nazis that they went on to make a propaganda film Theresienstadt The shooting of the film began on 26 February 1944 Directed by Kurt Gerron it was meant to show how well the Jews lived under the benevolent protection of Nazi Germany After the shooting most of the cast and even the filmmaker himself were deported to the concentration camp of Auschwitz where they were murdered Hans Fritzsche who had been head of the Radio Chamber was tried and acquitted by the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal Antisemitism during World War II Edit See also Hitler s prophecyAntisemitic wartime propaganda served a variety of purposes It was hoped that people in Allied countries would be persuaded that Jews should be blamed for the war The Nazis also wished to ensure that German people were aware of the extreme measures being carried out against the Jews on their behalf in order to incriminate them and thus guarantee their continued loyalty through fear by Nazi conjectured scenarios of supposed post war Jewish reprisals 23 24 Especially from 1942 onwards the announcement that Jews were being exterminated served as a group unification factor to preclude desertion and force the Germans to continue fighting Germans were fed the knowledge that too many atrocities had been committed especially against the Jews to allow for an understanding to be reached with the Allies David Bankier 2002 The Use of Antisemitism in Nazi Wartime Propaganda 25 Nazi media vilified arch enemies of Nazi Germany as Jewish Franklin Delano Roosevelt 26 or in the cases of Josef Stalin and Sir Winston Churchill abject puppets of an international Jewish conspiracy intent on ruining Germany and Nazism 27 Problems in propaganda arose easily in this stage expectations of success were raised too high and too quickly which required explanation if they were not fulfilled and blunted the effects of success and the hushing of blunders and failures caused mistrust 19 The increasing hardship of the war for the German people also called forth more propaganda that the war had been forced on the German people by the refusal of foreign powers to accept their strength and independence 19 Goebbels called for propaganda to toughen up the German people and not make victory look easy 19 After Hitler s death his successor as chancellor of Germany Joseph Goebbels informed the Reichssender Hamburg radio station The station broke the initial news of Hitler s death on the night of 1 May an announcer claimed he had died that afternoon as a hero fighting against Bolshevism Hitler s successor as head of state Karl Donitz further asserted that the United States forces were continuing the war solely to spread Bolshevism a Marxist Leninist form of communism within Europe 28 Media EditBooks Edit The Nazis and sympathizers published many propaganda books Most of the beliefs that would become associated with the Nazis such as German nationalism eugenics and antisemitism had been in circulation since the 19th century and the Nazis seized on this body of existing work in their own publications The most notable is Hitler s Mein Kampf detailing his beliefs 29 The book outlines major ideas that would later culminate in World War II It is heavily influenced by Gustave Le Bon s 1895 The Crowd A Study of the Popular Mind which theorized propaganda as a way to control the seemingly irrational behavior of crowds Particularly prominent is the violent antisemitism of Hitler and his associates drawing among other sources on the fabricated Protocols of the Elders of Zion 1897 which implied that Jews secretly conspired to rule the world This book was a key source of propaganda for the Nazis and helped fuel their common hatred against the Jews during World War II 30 For example Hitler claimed that the international language Esperanto was part of a Jewish plot and makes arguments toward the old German nationalist ideas of Drang nach Osten and the necessity to gain Lebensraum living space eastwards especially in Russia Other books such as Rassenkunde des deutschen Volkes Racial Science of the German People by Hans Gunther 31 and Rasse und Seele Race and Soul by Dr Ludwig Ferdinand Clauss de 32 published under different titles between 1926 and 1934 33 394 attempt to identify and classify the differences between the German Nordic or Aryan type and other supposedly inferior peoples These books were used as texts in German schools during the Nazi era The pre existing and popular genre of Schollen roman or novel of the soil also known as blood and soil novels 34 was given a boost by the acceptability of its themes to the Nazis and developed a mysticism of unity 35 The immensely popular Red Indian stories by Karl May were permitted despite the heroic treatment of the hero Winnetou and colored races instead the argument was made that the stories demonstrated the fall of the Red Indians was caused by a lack of racial consciousness to encourage it in the Germans 36 Other fictional works were also adapted Heidi was stripped of its Christian elements and Robinson Crusoe s relationship to Friday was made a master slave one 37 Children s books also made their appearance In 1938 Julius Streicher published Der Giftpilz The Poisonous Mushroom a storybook that equated the Jewish people to poisonous mushrooms and aimed to educate children about the Jews The book was an example of antisemitic propaganda and stated that The following tales tell the truth about the Jewish poison mushroom They show the many shapes the Jew assumes They show the depravity and baseness of the Jewish race They show the Jew for what he really is The Devil in human form 38 Textbooks Edit Geopolitical atlases emphasized Nazi schemes demonstrating the encirclement of Germany depicting how the prolific Slav nations would cause the German people to be overrun and in contrast showing the relative population density of Germany was much higher than that of the Eastern regions where they would seek Lebensraum 39 Textbooks would often show that the birth rate amongst Slavs was prolific compared to Germans 40 Geography text books stated how crowded Germany had become 41 Other charts would show the cost of disabled children as opposed to healthy ones or show how two child families threatened the birthrate 42 Math books discussed military applications and used military word problems physics and chemistry concentrated on military applications and grammar classes were devoted to propaganda sentences 43 Other textbooks dealt with the history of the Nazi Party 44 Elementary school reading text included large amounts of propaganda 45 Children were taught through textbooks that they were the Aryan master race Herrenvolk while the Jews were untrustworthy parasitic and Untermenschen inferior subhumans 46 Course content and textbooks unnecessarily included information that was propagandistic an attempt to sway the children s views from an early age 47 Maps showing the racial composition of Europe were banned from the classroom after many efforts that did not define the territory widely enough for party officials 48 Fairy tales were put to use with Cinderella being presented as a tale of how the prince s racial instincts lead him to reject the stepmother s alien blood present in her daughters for the racially pure maiden 49 Nordic sagas were likewise presented as the illustration of Fuhrerprinzip which was developed with such heroes as Frederick the Great and Otto von Bismarck 50 Literature was to be chosen within the German spirit rather than a fixed list of forbidden and required which made the teachers all the more cautious 51 although Jewish authors were impossible for classrooms 52 While only William Shakespeare s Macbeth and The Merchant of Venice were actually recommended none of the plays were actually forbidden even Hamlet denounced for flabbiness of soul 53 Biology texts however were put to the most use in presenting eugenic principles and racial theories this included explanations of the Nuremberg Laws which were claimed to allow the German and Jewish peoples to co exist without the danger of mixing 54 Science was to be presented as the most natural area for introducing the Jewish Question once teachers took care to point out that in nature animals associated with those of their own species 55 Teachers guidelines on racial instruction presented both the handicapped and Jews as dangers 56 Despite their many photographs glamorizing the Nordic type the texts also claimed that visual inspection was insufficient and genealogical analysis was required to determine their types and report any hereditary problems 57 However the National Socialist Teachers League NSLB stressed that at primary schools in particular they had to work on only the Nordic racial core of the German Volk again and again and contrast it with the racial composition of foreign populations and the Jews 46 Books in occupied countries Edit In occupied France the German Institute encouraged the translation of German works although chiefly German nationalists not ardent Nazis produced a massive increase in the sale of translated works 58 The only books in English to be sold were English classics and books with Jewish authors or Jewish subject matter such as biographies were banned except for some scientific works 59 Control of the paper supply allowed Germans the easy ability to pressure publishers about books 59 Comics Edit The Nazi controlled government in German occupied France produced the Vica comic book series during World War II as a propaganda tool against the Allied forces The Vica series authored by Vincent Krassousky represented Nazi influence and perspective in French society and included such titles as Vica Contre le service secret Anglais and Vica defie l Oncle Sam 60 Films Edit Main articles Nazism and cinema and List of German films 1933 1945 Leni Riefenstahl with Heinrich Himmler at Nuremberg in 1934 The Totenehrung honouring of dead at the 1934 Nuremberg Rally SS leader Heinrich Himmler Adolf Hitler and SA leader Viktor Lutze from L to R on the stone terrace in front of the Ehrenhalle Hall of Honour in the Luitpoldarena In the background is the crescent shaped Ehrentribune literally tribune of honour The Nazis produced many films to promote their views using the party s Department of Film for organizing film propaganda An estimated 45 million people attended film screenings put on by the NSDAP 61 Reichsamtsleiter Neumann declared that the goal of the Department of Film was not directly political in nature but was rather to influence the culture education and entertainment of the general population 61 On 22 September 1933 a Department of Film was incorporated into the Chamber of Culture The department controlled the licensing of every film prior to its production Sometimes the government selected the actors for a film financed the production partially or totally and granted tax breaks to the producers Awards for valuable films would decrease taxes thus encouraging self censorship among movie makers 62 Under Goebbels and Hitler the German film industry became entirely nationalized The National Socialist Propaganda Directorate which Goebbels oversaw had at its disposal nearly all film agencies in Germany by 1936 Occasionally certain directors such as Wolfgang Liebeneiner were able to bypass Goebbels by providing him with a different version of the film than would be released Such films include those directed by Helmut Kautner Romanze in Moll Romance in a Minor Key 1943 Grosse Freiheit Nr 7 The Great Freedom No 7 1944 and Unter den Brucken Under the Bridges 1945 Schools were also provided with motion picture projectors because the film was regarded as particularly appropriate for propagandizing children 63 Films specifically created for schools were termed military education 63 Triumph des Willens Triumph of the Will 1935 by film maker Leni Riefenstahl chronicled the Nazi Party Congress of 1934 in Nuremberg It followed an earlier film of the 1933 Nuremberg Rally produced by Riefenstahl Der Sieg des Glaubens Triumph of the Will features footage of uniformed party members though relatively few German soldiers who are marching and drilling to militaristic tunes The film contains excerpts from speeches given by various Nazi leaders at the Congress including Adolf Hitler Frank Capra used scenes from the film which he described partially as the ominous prelude of Hitler s holocaust of hate in many parts of the United States government s Why We Fight anti Axis seven film series to demonstrate what the personnel of the American military would be facing in World War II and why the Axis had to be defeated During 1940 three antisemitic films were shown The Rothschilds Jud Suss and Der ewige Jude 64 Der ewige Jude The Eternal Jew 1940 was directed by Fritz Hippler at the insistence of Goebbels though the writing is credited to Eberhard Taubert The movie is done in the style of a feature length documentary the central thesis being the immutable racial personality traits that characterize the Jew as a wandering cultural parasite Throughout the film these traits are contrasted to the Nazi state ideal while Aryan men find satisfaction in physical labour and the creation of value Jews only find pleasure in money and a hedonist lifestyle The movie is resolved with Hitler giving a speech hinting at the coming Final Solution his plan to exterminate millions of Jews 65 One historian has noted that so radical was the film s antisemitism that the Propaganda Ministry had doubts about showing it to the public it was most successful amongst Party activists the general public was less impressed 66 The main medium was Die Deutsche Wochenschau a newsreel series produced for cinemas from 1940 Newsreels were explicitly intended to portray German interests as successful 67 Themes often included the virtues of the Nordic or Aryan type German military and industrial strength and the evils of the Nazi enemies Fine art Edit Arno Breker s sculptures of the Nordic man made him Hitler s favorite sculptor 68 Main article Nazi art See also Degenerate art By Nazi standards fine art was not propaganda Its purpose was to create ideals for eternity 69 This produced a call for heroic and romantic art which reflected the ideal rather than the realistic 48 Explicitly political paintings were very rare 70 Still more rare were antisemitic paintings because the art was supposed to be on a higher plane 71 Nevertheless selected themes common in propaganda were the most common topics of art Sculpture was used as an expression of Nazi racial theories 72 The most common image was of the nude male expressing the ideal of the Aryan race 73 Nudes were required to be physically perfect 74 At the Paris Exposition of 1937 Josef Thorak s Comradeship stood outside the German pavilion depicting two enormous nude males clasping hands and standing defiantly side by side in a pose of defense and racial camaraderie 48 Landscape painting featured mostly heavily in the Greater German Art exhibition 70 in accordance with themes of blood and soil 75 Peasants were also popular images reflecting a simple life in harmony with nature 76 frequently with large families 77 With the advent of war war art came to be a significant though still not predominating proportion 78 The continuing of the German Art Exhibition throughout the war was put forth as a manifestation of German s culture 79 Magazines Edit In and after 1939 the Zeitschriften Dienst was sent to magazines to provide guidelines on what to write for appropriate topics 80 Nazi publications also carried various forms of propaganda Neues Volk was a monthly publication of the Office of Racial Policy which answered questions about acceptable race relations 81 While mainly focused on race relations it also included articles about the strength and character of the Aryan race compared to Jews and other defectives 82 The NS Frauen Warte aimed at women included such topics as the role of women in the Nazi state 83 Despite its propaganda elements it was predominantly a women s magazine 84 It defended anti intellectualism 85 urged women to have children even in wartime 86 87 put forth what the Nazis had done for women 88 discussed bridal schools 89 and urged women to greater efforts in total war 90 Der Pimpf was aimed at boys and contained both adventure and propaganda 91 Das deutsche Madel in contrast recommended that girls take up hiking tending the wounded and preparing to care for children 92 Far more than NS Frauen Warte it emphasized the strong and active German woman 84 Signal Edit Main article Signal magazine Signal was a propaganda magazine published by the Wehrmacht during World War II 93 and distributed throughout occupied Europe and neutral countries Published from April 1940 to March 1945 Signal had the highest sales of any magazine published in Europe during the period circulation peaked at 2 5 million in 1943 At various times it was published in at least twenty languages An English edition was distributed in the British Channel Islands of Guernsey Jersey Alderney and Sark which were occupied by the Wehrmacht during the war The promoter of the magazine was the chief of the Wehrmacht propaganda office Colonel Hasso von Wedel Its annual budget was 10 million Reichsmarks roughly 2 5 million at the pre war exchange rate The image that Signal transmitted was that of Nazi Germany and its New Order as the great benefactor of European peoples and of Western civilization in general The danger of a Soviet invasion of Europe was strongly pointed out The quality of the magazine itself was quite high featuring complete reviews from the front lines rich in information and photos even displaying a double center page full color picture In fact many of the most famous Second World War photos that are to be seen today come from Signal The magazine contained little to no antisemitic propaganda as the contents were mainly military 94 95 96 Newspapers Edit The Volkischer Beobachter People s Observer was the official daily newspaper of the NSDAP since December 1920 It disseminated Nazi ideology in the form of brief hyperboles directed against the weakness of parliamentarism the evils of Jewry and Bolshevism the national humiliation of the Versailles Treaty and other such topics 97 It was joined in 1926 by Der Angriff The Attack a weekly and later daily paper founded by Joseph Goebbels It was mainly dedicated to attacks against political opponents and Jews one of its most striking features were vehemently antisemitic cartoons by Hans Schweitzer but also engaged in the glorification of Nazi heroes such as Horst Wessel 6 The Illustrierter Beobachter was their weekly illustrated paper 98 Other Nazi publications included Das Reich a more moderate and highbrow publication aimed at intellectuals and foreigners Der Sturmer the most virulently antisemitic of all 99 Das Schwarze Korps an SS publication aiming at a more intellectual tone 100 After Hitler s rise to power in 1933 all of the regular press came under complete Nazi editorial control through the policy of Gleichschaltung and short lived propaganda newspapers were also established in the conquered territories during World War II Alfred Rosenberg was a key member of the Nazi Party who gained control of their newspaper which was openly praised by Hitler However Hitler was dissatisfied by Rosenberg s work and slandered Rosenberg behind his back discrediting his work 101 Newspapers in occupied countries Edit In Ukraine after Nazis cracked down on the papers most papers printed only articles from German agencies producing the odd effect of more anti American and anti British articles than anti Communist ones 102 They also printed articles about antecedents of German rule over Ukraine such as Catherine the Great and the Goths 102 In Norway during the 1930s the newspaper Aftenposten was supportive of Nazi Germany and after Norway was occupied in 1940 the newspaper was used by the Germans to spread propaganda The editor was replaced by a member of Vidkun Quisling s government 103 Photography Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Adolf Hitler rehearsing poses for his speeches in photos reportedly taken in 1927 The Nazis used photographers to document events and promote ideology Photographers included Heinrich Hoffmann and Hugo Jaeger Hoffmann worked in his father s photographic shop and as a photographer in Munich from 1908 He joined the NSDAP on 6 April 1920 After Hitler took over the party in 1921 he named Hoffmann as his official photographer a post he held for over a quarter century A photograph taken by Hoffmann in Munich s Odeonsplatz on 2 August 1914 shows a young Hitler among the crowds cheering the outbreak of World War I and was used in Nazi propaganda Hitler and Hoffmann became close friends in fact when Hitler became the ruler of Germany Hoffmann was the only man authorized to take official photographs of him Hoffmann s photographs were published as postage stamps postcards posters and picture books Following Hoffmann s suggestion both he and Hitler received royalties from all uses of Hitler s image even on postage stamps which made Hoffmann a millionaire In 1933 he was elected to the Reichstag and in 1938 Hitler appointed him a Professor Hitler s field headquarters Hitler with staff May or June 1940 Heinrich Hoffmann front row far right Nine photographs taken by Hoffman reveal how Hitler rehearsed poses and his hand gestures He asked Hoffmann to take pictures so that he could see how he looked while speaking Egon Hanfstaengl son of Hitler s one time foreign press officer Ernst Putzi Hanfstaengl said in a documentary Fatal Attraction of Hitler He had that ability which is needed to make people stop thinking critically and just emote citation needed Posters Edit We have only one goal Victory at all costs Parole der Woche 29 April 1942 Wochenspruch der NSDAP 11 January 1943 quotes Hermann Goring We do not want to leave to our children and descendants what we can do ourselves Poster art was a mainstay of the Nazi propaganda effort aimed both at Germany itself and occupied territories It had several advantages The visual effect being striking would reach the viewer easily 104 Posters were also unlike other forms of propaganda difficult to avoid 105 Imagery frequently drew on heroic realism 106 Nazi youth and the SS were depicted monumentally with lighting posed to produce grandeur 106 Parole der Woche wall newspapers were published by the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda The first edition was distributed on 16 March 1936 Every week an estimated 125 000 posters were administered to the public from 1936 to 1943 107 Word of the Week posters were politically skewed and meant to rally public opinion in support of the Nazi efforts The posters set out to educate and unify the German people before and especially during World War II The posters were placed in train cars buses platforms ticket windows anywhere there was dense traffic flow Very few individuals at the time owned a car most biked walked or used public transportation daily Exposure to the Word of the Week posters was high in German cities The messages and Nazi ideologies stared out at the mass public for a week at a time in tens of thousands of places German pedestrians were likely to pass in the course of a day 107 Jeffery Herf author of The Jewish Enemy Nazi Propaganda During World War II and the Holocaust described the poster campaign as a combination of a newspaper editorial political leaflet political poster and tabloid journalism 107 Adolf Hitler personally appointed artist Hans Schweitzer known as Mjolnir with the task of translating Nazi ideology into images for the wall newspaper 108 The posters were 100 centimeters high and 212 centimeters wide 107 The visual style of the posters was bold text and Nazi influenced colors it meant to capture the attention of the German passersby The text was big so that several people could read it at the same time and from a distance of a few feet 107 The majority of the posters were centered on Jews and the Allied countries of Great Britain the United States of America and Russia During the time period when antisemitic articles decreased in publications the antisemitic rhetoric was ramped up in The Word of the Week posters From 1941 to 1943 about twenty five percent of The Word Of The Week posters included an attack on Jews 107 The Jews were depicted as enemies because of their supposed economic war capitalism and connection to the Bolshevik revolution in Russia 108 The Nazi regime fostered the idea that the Jews were the masterminds behind all oppositional political forces Images often showed a Jewish figure positioned behind or above symbols of economic and political influence 108 Additionally it was also common to depict the Allied forces of Great Britain the United States and Russia as overtaken by Jewry Posters were also used in schools depicting for instance an institution for the feeble minded on one hand and houses on the other to inform the students that the annual cost of this institution would build 17 homes for healthy families 109 Radio Edit See also Radio propaganda Nazi Germany and List of English language broadcasters for Nazi Germany Before Hitler came to power he rarely used radio to connect with the public and when he did so non party newspapers were allowed to publish his speeches 110 This changed soon after he came to power in 1933 Hitler s speeches became widely broadcast all over Germany especially on the radio itself introduced by the Ministry of Propaganda They were shown in weekly newsreels and reprinted in large editions in books and pamphlets all across Germany 110 Hitler s speeches became so significant to the Nazis that even restaurants and pubs were expected to have their radios on whenever he was delivering one and in some cities public speakers were used so passersby could hear them 110 The Nazis also sold cheap radios so that people could hear speeches at home These were called the People s Receivers and were sold for 76 marks while cheaper versions were sold for 35 marks 111 Nazi propaganda emphasized and portrayed his speeches so that their main points appeared in weekly posters and were all over Germany by the hundreds of thousands 110 Nazi propaganda also used radio as an important tool to promote genocide 112 Internal broadcasts Edit Recognising the importance of radio in disseminating the Nazi message Goebbels approved a scheme whereby millions of cheap radio sets the Volksempfanger were subsidised by the government In the Radio as the Eighth Great Power 113 speech Goebbels proclaimed It would not have been possible for us to take power or to use it in the ways we have without the radio It is no exaggeration to say that the German revolution at least in the form it took would have been impossible without the airplane and the radio Radio reached the entire nation regardless of class standing or religion That was primarily the result of the tight centralization the strong reporting and the up to date nature of the German radio Above all it is necessary to clearly centralize all radio activities to place spiritual tasks ahead of technical ones to provide a clear worldview By the start of the Second World War over 70 of German households had one of these radios which were deliberately limited in range in order to prevent loyal citizens from considering other viewpoints in foreign broadcasts 112 Radio broadcasts were also played over loudspeakers in public places and workplaces 112 In private homes however people could easily turn off the radio when bored and did so once the novelty of hearing the voice from a box wore off this caused the Nazis to introduce many non propaganda elements such as music advice and tips serials and other entertainment 114 This was accelerated during the war to prevent people from tuning in enemy propaganda broadcasts though Goebbels claimed in his Das Reich article that it was to make the radio a good companion to the people he admitted the truth in his diary 115 External broadcasts Edit William Joyce who was Lord Haw Haw to British wartime listeners now under arrest lies in an ambulance under armed guard before being taken from British Second Army Headquarters to a hospital Philippe Henriot in 1934 who later became a Vichy minister and broadcaster for the Nazis As well as domestic broadcasts the Nazi regime used radio to deliver its message to both occupied territories and enemy states One of the main targets was the United Kingdom to which William Joyce broadcast regularly gaining the nickname Lord Haw Haw Joyce first appeared on German radio on 6 September 1939 reading the news in English but soon became noted for his often mischievous propaganda broadcasts 116 Joyce was executed for treason in 1946 Although Joyce was the most notorious and most regularly heard of British propagandists other broadcasters included Norman Baillie Stewart Jersey born teacher Pearl Vardon British Union of Fascists members Leonard Banning and Susan Hilton Barry Payne Jones of the Link and Alexander Fraser Grant whose show was aimed specifically at Scotland also broadcasting through the New British Broadcasting Service 117 Broadcasts were also made to the United States notably by Robert Henry Best and Axis Sally Mildred Gillars Best a freelance journalist based in Vienna was initially arrested following the German declaration of war on the U S but soon became a feature on propaganda radio attacking the influence of the Jews in the U S and the leadership of Franklin Delano Roosevelt 118 who succeeded Winston Churchill in Nazi propaganda as World Enemy Number One 119 Best was later sentenced to life imprisonment for treason and died in prison in 1952 Gillars a teacher in Germany mostly broadcast on similar themes as well as peppering her speech with allegations of infidelity against the wives of servicemen Her most notorious broadcast was the Vision of Invasion radio play broadcast immediately prior to D Day from the perspective of an American mother who dreamed that her soldier son died violently in Normandy 120 France also received broadcasts from Radio Stuttgart where Paul Ferdonnet an antisemitic journalist was the main voice during the Phoney War 121 Following the occupation Radio Paris and Radio Vichy became the main organs of propaganda with leading far right figures such as Jacques Doriot Philippe Henriot and Jean Herold Paquis regularly speaking in support of the Nazis Others who broadcast included Gerald Hewitt a British citizen who lived most of his life in Paris and had been associated with Action Francaise 122 Domestic broadcasters were also used to galvanise support for occupation in Belgium where Ward Hermans regularly spoke in support of the Nazis from his base in Bremen 123 and the Italian Social Republic to where Giovanni Preziosi broadcast a vehemently antisemitic show from his base in Munich 124 Pro Nazi radio broadcasts in the Arabic language aired in North Africa crafted with the help of Mohammad Amin al Husayni and other Arab exiles in Berlin to highlight Arab nationalism They recast Nazi racist ideology to target Jews alone not all Semites Downplaying Mussolini s operations in Africa they touted the anti colonialism of the Axis powers 125 126 Speakers Edit The Nazi Party relied heavily on speakers to make its propaganda presentations most heavily before they came to power but also afterwards Hitler in Mein Kampf recounted that he had realized that it was not written matter but the spoken word that brought about changes as people would not read things that they disagreed with but would linger to hear a speaker 127 Furthermore speakers having their audiences before them could see their reactions and adjust accordingly to persuade 128 His own oratory was a major factor in his rise and he despised those who came to read pre written speeches 129 Such speakers were particularly important when the information put across was not desired to reach foreigners who could access the mass media 130 Schools were instituted to substitute for the political conflict that had formed the old speakers 131 In 1939 Walter Tiessler de speaking of his own experience as an early speaker urged that they continue 132 Sturmabteilung speakers were used though their reliance on instinct sometimes offended well educated audiences but their blunt and folksy manner often had its own appeal 133 The ministry would provide such speakers with information such as how to spin the problems on the eastern front 134 or how to discuss the cuts in food rations 135 The party propaganda headquarters sent the Redner Schnellinformation Speakers Express Information out with guidelines for immediate campaigns such as antisemitic campaigns and what information to present 130 Specific groups were targeted with such speakers Speakers for instance were created specifically for Hitler Youth 136 These would among other things lecture Hitler Youth and the BDM on the need to produce more children 137 Speakers often addressed political or military rallies which were well orchestrated events with banners and marching bands 138 Historiography EditNazi propaganda is a relatively recent topic of close study 139 Historians of all persuasions including Eastern Bloc writers agree about its remarkable effectiveness 139 Their assessment of its significance however whether it shaped or merely directed and exploited public opinion is influenced by their approach to wider questions raised by the study of Nazi Germany such as the question of whether the Nazi state was a fully totalitarian dictatorship as argued by Hannah Arendt or whether it also depended on a certain societal consensus 140 In addition to media archives an important primary source for the study of the Nazi propaganda effort are the reports on civilian morale and public opinion that the Sicherheitsdienst and later the RMVP compiled from 1939 on Another are the Deutschland Berichte reports gathered by underground agents of the Sopade that particularly dealt with German popular opinion 141 See also EditThemes in Nazi propaganda Amt Rosenberg Children s propaganda in Nazi Germany Propaganda during World War II American propaganda during World War II British propaganda during World War II Japanese propaganda during World War II Propaganda in Fascist Italy Propaganda in the Soviet Union Big lie Censorship in Germany LTI Lingua Tertii Imperii Myth of the clean Wehrmacht Nazi board games Rommel myth Wunderwaffe XGRS Hate mediaReferences Edit Zitelmann Rainer 2022 Hitler s National Socialism Management Books 2000 Oxford 2022 ISBN 978 1 852 52790 7 These are chapter VI War Propaganda and XI Propaganda and Organization Welch 10 see Mein Kampf ch VI Welch 11 a b Mein Kampf citations are from the Project Gutenberg hosted 1939 English translation by James Murphy a b Welch 13 a b Adena Maja Enikolopov Ruben Petrova Maria Santarosa Veronica Zhuravskaya Ekaterina 1 November 2015 Radio and the Rise of The Nazis in Prewar Germany The Quarterly Journal of Economics 130 4 1885 1939 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 394 6814 doi 10 1093 qje qjv030 ISSN 0033 5533 S2CID 4689404 Welch 14 Peter H Merkl 2010 German Unification in the European Context Penn State Press p 35 ISBN 978 0271044095 Hitler Adolf Mein Kampf Boston Houghton Mifflin 1999 Erica Carter 2004 Dietrich s ghosts the sublime and the beautiful in Third Reich film British Film Institute p 164 ISBN 978 0 85170 883 6 German newspaper editor outlining the claims of Polish atrocities against minorities Nizkor org Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b Roy Godson James J Wirtz 2011 Strategic Denial and Deception The Twenty First Century Challenge Transaction Publishers p 100 ISBN 978 1412835206 a b Lightbody Bradley 2004 The Second World War Ambitions to Nemesis Taylor amp Francis p 39 ISBN 978 0203644584 Manvell Roger Fraenkel Heinrich 2007 Heinrich Himmler The Sinister Life of the Head of the SS and Gestapo Greenhill Books p 76 ISBN 978 1602391789 Bartov Omer 1992 Hitler s Army Soldiers Nazis and War in the Third Reich New York Oxford University Press p 86 ISBN 978 0195079036 Bartov Omer 1992 Hitler s Army Soldiers Nazis and War in the Third Reich New York Oxford University Press p 159 ISBN 978 0195079036 Bartov Omer 1992 Hitler s Army Soldiers Nazis and War in the Third Reich New York Oxford University Press p 30 ISBN 978 0195079036 a b c d e Michael Leonard Graham Balfour 1979 Propaganda in War 1939 1945 Organisations Policies and Publics in Britain and Germany Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0710001931 The Heroic Year Front and Homeland Report the War Calvin edu 15 June 1940 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Paul Hanebrink 2018 A Specter Haunting Europe The Myth of Judeo Bolshevism Harvard University Press p 148 ISBN 978 0674047686 Rolf Dieter Muller Gerd R Ueberschar 1997 Hitler s War in the East 1941 1945 A Critical Assessment Berghahn Books p 244 ISBN 978 1571810687 Richard Breitman et al 2005 OSS Knowledge of the Holocaust In U S Intelligence and the Nazis pp 11 44 Online Cambridge Cambridge University Press Available from Cambridge Books Online doi 10 1017 CBO9780511618178 006 Accessed 21 April 2016 page 27 Michael Berenbaum 2002 The Holocaust and History The Known the Unknown the Disputed and the Reexamined Indiana University Press p 46 ISBN 978 0253215291 Michael Berenbaum 2002 The Holocaust and History The Known the Unknown the Disputed and the Reexamined Indiana University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0253215291 Nazi Caricatures of FDR research calvin edu Winston Churchill in Nazi Propaganda www bytwerk com Shirer William L 1960 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich New York Simon amp Schuster pp 1137 1138 ISBN 978 0671624200 George L Mosse 1966 Nazi Culture intellectual cultural and social life in the Third Reich University of Wisconsin Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 299 19304 1 McKale Donald 2002 Hitler s Shadow War The Holocaust and World War II New York Cooper Square Press Gunther Hans F K 1930 Rassenkunde des deutschen Volkes Racial Science of the German People in German Munchen J F Lehmann Clauss Ludwig Ferdinand 1926 Rasse und Seele Eine Einfuhrung in die Gegenwart Race and Soul An Introduction to the Contemporary World Munchen J F Lehmann Gray Richard T 2004 Learning to See Race Ludwig Ferdinand Clauss s Racial Psychology as Applied Phenomenology About Face German Physiognomic Thought from Lavater to Auschwitz Wayne State University Press pp 273 332 393 396 ISBN 9780814331798 Rasse und Seele has a curious publication history The first edition appeared under this title in 1926 with the subtitle Eine Einfuhrung in die Gegenwart An Introduction to the contemporary world A second heavily revised edition appeared in 1929 under an entirely different title Von Seele und Antlitz der Rassen und Volker On the soul and face of races and nations A third revised edition which returned to the origial title Rasse und Seele was published in 1934 this time with the subtitle of Eine Einfuhrung in den Sinn der leiblichen Gestalt An introduction to the meaning of somatic form and this latter edition remained the basis for all subsequent printings t he content of the three books is similar though the various editions tend to organize this material in very different ways Richard Grunberger The 12 Year Reich p 351 ISBN 0 03 076435 1 Pierre Aycoberry The Nazi Question p8 Pantheon Books New York 1981 Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 79 ISBN 0 679 77663 X Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press p 143 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Der Giftpilz German Propaganda Archive Calvin College Retrieved 1 November 2012 Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 76 ISBN 0 679 77663 X Otto Helmut Fertility and Race The Growth of the Slavs in Europe Volk in Gefahr 1938 Excerpts from a Nazi Geography Book 1943 Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press p 142 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 77 ISBN 0 679 77663 X The Battle for Germany 1938 Calvin edu 9 November 1923 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Excerpts from a Nazi Reading Primer 1941 Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b Lisa Pine 2010 Education in Nazi Germany Berg ISBN 978 1 84520 264 4 Corelli Marie May June 2002 Poisoning young minds in Nazi Germany children and propaganda in the Third Reich Communications and Mass Media Collection 66 a b c R J Overy 2004 The dictators Hitler s Germany and Stalin s Russia W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 02030 4 Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 77 8 ISBN 0 679 77663 X Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 78 ISBN 0 679 77663 X Milton Mayer They Thought They Were Free The Germans 1933 45 p194 1995 University of Chicago Press Chicago Milton Mayer They Thought They Were Free The Germans 1933 45 p192 1995 University of Chicago Press Chicago Milton Mayer They Thought They Were Free The Germans 1933 45 p193 1995 University of Chicago Press Chicago Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 85 ISBN 0 679 77663 X The Jewish Question in Education Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Nazi Racial Teaching Guidelines Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 86 ISBN 0 679 77663 X Wolin Richard 2004 The Seduction of Unreason The Intellectual Romance With Fascism From Nietzsche to Postmodernism Princeton University Press p 125 ISBN 978 0 691 11464 4 a b Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Vol 7 FIFTY FIRST DAY Tuesday 5 February 1946 Avalon law yale edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Vica Nazi Propaganda Comics Duke University Libraries Digital Collections Library duke edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b Bytwerk Randall 1998 First Course for Gau and County Propaganda Leaders of the NSDAP German Propaganda Archive Calvin College Retrieved 12 January 2017 Romani Cinzia 1992 Tainted Goddesses Female Film Stars of the Third Reich ISBN 978 0 9627613 1 7 a b Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p21 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Films Nazi Antisemitic Der Ewige Jude United States Holocaust Memorial Museum United States Holocaust Memorial Museum encyclopedia ushmm org content en article der ewige jude Evans Richard 2008 The Third Reich At War Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p32 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Fetscher Caroline August 2006 Why Mention Arno Breker Today Atlantic times com Archived from the original on 11 February 2012 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Adam Peter 1992 Art of the Third Reich Harry N Abrams Inc p 138 ISBN 978 0 8109 1912 9 a b Spotts Frederic 2003 Hitler and the Power of Aesthetics p 176 ISBN 978 1 58567 345 2 Adam Peter 1992 Art of the Third Reich Harry N Abrams Inc p 172 ISBN 978 0 8109 1912 9 Adam Peter 1992 Art of the Third Reich Harry N Abrams Inc p 177 ISBN 978 0 8109 1912 9 Adam Peter 1992 Art of the Third Reich Harry N Abrams Inc p 178 ISBN 978 0 8109 1912 9 Susan Sontag Fascinating Fascism Adam Peter 1992 Art of the Third Reich Harry N Abrams Inc p 66 ISBN 978 0 8109 1912 9 Adam Peter 1992 Art of the Third Reich Harry N Abrams Inc p 132 ISBN 978 0 8109 1912 9 Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p25 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Nazi War Art Bytwerk com Archived from the original on 11 July 2018 Retrieved 17 November 2021 Immortal German Culture Calvin edu 26 June 1943 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Zeitschriften Dienst Calvin edu 26 September 1941 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Neues Volk Bytwerk com Retrieved 9 February 2013 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press p 119 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Frauen Warte Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b Leila J Rupp Mobilizing Women for War p 45 ISBN 0 691 04649 2 OCLC 3379930 The Spirit of Race Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Ready to Die Ready to Live Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Life Must Win Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Mothers Day 1940 Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 The Reich School for Brides Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Strength from Love and Faith Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Der Pimpf Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Das deutsche Madel Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Signal A Nazi Propaganda Magazine Bytwerk com Retrieved 9 February 2013 Meyer S L Signal Hitler s Wartime Picture Magazine London 1976 Bison Publishing Co Introduction Pages 1 2 Photographs of the interior of Albert Speer s Reich Chancellery from Signal magazine Ww2incolor com Retrieved 9 February 2013 Alexander Zoller stalwart amberfisharts com Signal Magazine 1940 1945 Signalmagazine com Archived from the original on 22 November 2009 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Welch 12 Illustrierter Beobachter German Propaganda Archive Calvin University Retrieved 6 September 2019 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press p 228 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press pp 241 2 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Herzstein Robert 1980 The Nazis Alexandria Time Life Books a b Karel Cornelis Berkhoff 2004 Harvest of Despair Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01313 1 New book exposes media s Nazi past Norway s News in English www newsinenglish no 4 October 2019 Retrieved 21 May 2022 Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p22 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p24 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York a b Designing heroes Eyemagazine com Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b c d e f Herf Jeffery 2006 The Jewish Enemy Nazi Propaganda during World War II Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University a b c Corrigan John P Visual Culture and the Holocaust Nazi Anti Semitic Propaganda Visual Survey academia edu Retrieved 6 September 2019 Nazi Racial School Charts Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b c d Randall L Bytwerk 2008 Landmark Speeches of National Socialism Texas A amp M University Press p 7 ISBN 978 1 60344 441 5 Propaganda in Nazi Germany History Learning Site 9 Mar 2015 www historylearningsite co uk nazi germany propaganda in nazi germany a b c Chalk Frank November 1999 Radio Propaganda and Genocide PDF concordia ca Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies Concordia University Retrieved 6 September 2019 Goebbels on Radio Calvin edu 18 August 1933 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press p 94 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 The Good Companion Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Mary Kenny Germany Calling Dublin 2003 p 175 Sean Murphy Letting the Side Down British Traitors of the Second World War Stroud 2006 pp 50 102 The Press Worst Best Time com 15 February 1943 Archived from the original on 14 July 2007 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Smith Howard K 1942 Last Train from Berlin Knopf p 207 John Carver Edwards Berlin Calling American Broadcasters in Service to the Third Reich New York 1991 Philippe Randa Dictionnaire commente de la Collaboration francaise 1997 Murphy Letting the Side Down pp 85 87 David Littlejohn The Patriotic Traitors London Heinemann 1972 p 155 Ray Moseley Mussolini The Last 600 days of Il Duce 2004 p 118 Herf Jeffrey 22 November 2009 Hate Radio Chronicle of Higher Education Retrieved 17 March 2014 Jeffrey Herf Nazi Propaganda for the Arab World Yale University Press 2009 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press pp 17 8 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Brendon Piers 2000 The dark valley a panorama of the 1930s Alfred a Knopf Inc ISBN 978 0 375 40881 6 a b Twilight of the Jews Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Reich Speaker School Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Speakers Form the People s Soul Calvin edu Retrieved 9 February 2013 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 No Frostbite on the Eastern Front Calvin edu 21 February 1942 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Dealing with Cuts in Food Rations Calvin edu 16 March 1942 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Hitler Youth Speakers Calvin edu 1 January 1933 Retrieved 9 February 2013 George L Mosse 1966 Nazi Culture intellectual cultural and social life in the Third Reich University of Wisconsin Press p 277 ISBN 978 0 299 19304 1 Everyday Life Media The Holocaust Explained The Wiener Library Retrieved 6 September 2019 a b Welch 4 Welch 3 5 Welch 7Bibliography EditBytwerk Randall 2005 The Argument for Genocide in Nazi Propaganda Quarterly Journal of Speech 91 1 37 62 doi 10 1080 00335630500157516 S2CID 144116639 Herf Jeffrey 2006 The Jewish Enemy Nazi Ideology and Propaganda During World War II and the Holocaust Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02175 4 Kershaw Ian 25 October 2001 Hitler 1889 1936 Hubris Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 14 192579 0 Welch David 1993 The Third Reich Politics and Propaganda Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 93014 4 Further reading EditHerf Jeffrey 2005 The Jewish War Goebbels and the Antisemitic Campaigns of the Nazi Propaganda Ministry Holocaust and Genocide Studies 19 1 51 80 doi 10 1093 hgs dci003 S2CID 143944355 Tyaglyy M I 2004 The Role of Antisemitic Doctrine in German Propaganda in the Crimea 1941 1944 Holocaust and Genocide Studies 18 3 421 459 doi 10 1093 hgs dch087 S2CID 144554463 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nazi propaganda Advertising Evil Pro Nazi Posters slideshow by Life magazine Calvin University German Propaganda Archive Nazi and East German Propaganda Guide Page What is at Stake by Joseph Goebbels German Propaganda Archive Vica Nazi Propaganda Comics Duke University Libraries Digital Collections 2010 German Exhibit Shows Mass Appeal Of Nazi Ideology audio report by NPR Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Propaganda in Nazi Germany amp oldid 1154509454, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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