World-Information City

 CONTENTS   SEARCH   HISTORY   HELP 



  Text blocks:

  Index cards

 



 WORLD-INFOSTRUCTURE > DISINFORMATION AND DEMOCRACY > MOVIES AS A PROPAGANDA- AND ...
  Movies as a Propaganda- and Disinformation-Tool in World War I and II


Movies produced in Hollywood in 1918/19 were mainly anti-German. They had some influence but the bigger effect was reached in World War II-movies.
The first propaganda movie of World War II was British.
At that time all films had to pass censoring. Most beloved were entertaining movies with propaganda messages. The enemy was shown as a beast, an animal-like creature, a brutal person without soul and as an idiot. Whereas the own people were the heroes. That was the new form of atrocity.
Leni Riefenstahl was a genius in this respect. Her movies still have an incredible power, while the majority of the other movies of that time look ridiculous today. The combination of light and shadow, the dramatic music and the mass-scenes that resembled ballet, had its effect and political consequences. Some of the German movies of that period still are on the index.

U.S.-President Theodore Roosevelt considered movies the best propaganda-instrument, as they are more subtle than other tools.

In the late twenties, movies got more and more important, in the USSR, too, like Sergei Eisenstein demonstrated with his movies. Historic events were changed into symbolism, exactly the way propaganda should function. It was disinformation - but in its most artistic form, especially in comparison to most U.S.- and European movies of that time.




browse Report:
Disinformation and Democracy
    Abstract
 ...
-3   Atrocity Stories
-2   Cartoons
-1   Posters
0   Movies as a Propaganda- and Disinformation-Tool in World War I and II
+1   Radio
+2   Television
+3   Positive Images
     ...
Conclusion
 INDEX CARD     RESEARCH MATRIX 
Binary number system
In mathematics, the term binary number system refers to a positional numeral system employing 2 as the base and requiring only two different symbols, 0 and 1. The importance of the binary system to information theory and computer technology derives mainly from the compact and reliable manner in which data can be represented in electromechanical devices with two states--such as "on-off," "open-closed," or "go-no go."