Cold War Propaganda
The United States and the Soviet Union both used propaganda extensively during the Cold War. Both sides used film, television and radio programming to influence their own citizens, each other and Third World nations. The United States Information Agency operated the Voice of America as an official government station. Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, in part supported by the Central Intelligence Agency, provided grey propaganda in news and entertainment programs to Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union respectively. The Soviet Union's official government station Radio Moscow, broadcast white propaganda, while Radio Peace and Freedom broadcast grey propaganda. Both sides also broadcast black propaganda programs around special crises.
One of the most insightful authors of the Cold War was George Orwell, whose novels Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four are virtual textbooks on the use of propaganda. Though not set in the Soviet Union, their characters live under totalitarian regimes in which language is constantly corrupted for political purposes. Those novels were used for explicit propaganda such as the CIA secretly commissioned an animated film adaptation of Animal Farm in the 1950s.
Techniques of Propaganda Generation
Saddam Hussein pictured as a decisive war leader in an Iraqi propaganda picture
A number of techniques are used to create messages which are persuasive, but false. Many of these same techniques can be found under
logical fallacies since propagandists use arguments which, although sometimes convincing, are not necessarily valid.
Some time has been spent analyzing the means by which propaganda messages
are transmitted, and that work is important, but it's clear that information
dissemination strategies only become propaganda strategies when coupled with
propagandistic messages. Identifying these propaganda messages is a necessary prerequisite to studying the methods by which those messages are spread. That's why it is essential to have some knowledge of the following
techniques for generating propaganda:
Appeal to fear: Appeals to fear seeks to build support by instilling fear in the general population - for example Joseph Goebbels exploited Theodore Kaufman's Germany Must Perish! to claim that the Allies sought the extermination of the German people.
Appeal to authority: Appeals to authority cite prominent figures to support a position idea, argument, or
course of action.
Bandwagon: Bandwagon-and-inevitable-victory
appeals attempt to persuade the target audience to take a course of action
"everyone else is taking." "Join the crowd." This technique reinforces people's natural desire to be on the winning side. This technique is used to convince the audience that a program is an expression of an irresistible mass movement and that it is in their interest to join. "Inevitable victory" invites those not already on the bandwagon to join those already on the road to certain victory. Those already, or partially, on the bandwagon are reassured that staying aboard is the best course of action.
Obtain disapproval: This technique is
used to get the audience to disapprove an action or idea by suggesting the
idea is popular with groups hated, feared, or held in contempt by the target
audience. Thus, if a group which supports a policy is led to believe that undesirable, subversive, or contemptible people also support it, the members of the group might decide to change their position.
Glittering generalities:
Glittering generalities are intensely emotionally appealing words so closely
associated with highly valued concepts and beliefs that they carry conviction
without supporting information or reason. They appeal to such emotions as love of country, home; desire for peace, freedom, glory, honor, etc. They ask for approval without examination of the reason. Though the words and phrases are vague and suggest different things to different people, their connotation is always favorable: "The concepts and programs of the propagandist are always good, desirable, virtuous."
Rationalization: Individuals or groups
may use favorable generalities to rationalize questionable acts or beliefs.
Vague and pleasant phrases are often used to justify such actions or beliefs.
Intentional vagueness: Generalities
are deliberately vague so that the audience may supply its own interpretations.
The intention is to move the audience by use of undefined phrases, without
analyzing their validity or attempting to determine their reasonableness
or application
Transfer: This is a technique of projecting positive or negative qualities (praise or blame) of a person, entity, object,
or value (an individual, group, organization, nation, patriotism, etc.) to
another in order to make the second more acceptable or to discredit it.
This technique is generally used to transfer blame from one member of a
conflict to another.
It evokes an emotional response which stimulates the target to identify
with recognized authorities.
Oversimplification: Favorable
generalities are used to provide simple answers to complex social, political,
economic, or military problems.
Common man: The "plain folks" or "common man"
approach attempts to convince the audience that the propagandist's positions
reflect the common sense of the people. It is designed to win the confidence of the audience by communicating in the common manner and style of the audience.
Propagandists use ordinary language and mannerisms (and clothes in face-to-face and audiovisual communications) in attempting to identify their point of view with that of the average person.
Testimonial: Testimonials are quotations,
in or out of context, especially cited to support or reject a given policy,
action, program, or personality. The reputation or the role (expert, respected public figure, etc.) of the individual giving the statement is exploited.
The testimonial places the official sanction of a respected person or
authority on a propaganda message. This is done in an effort to cause the target audience to identify itself with the authority or to accept the authority's opinions and beliefs as its own.
Stereotyping or Labeling: This technique
attempts to arouse prejudices in an audience by labeling the object of the
propaganda campaign as something the target audience fears, hates, loathes,
or finds undesirable.
Scapegoating: Assigning blame to an
individual or group that isn't really responsible, thus alleviating feelings
of guilt from responsible parties and/or distracting attention from the need
to fix the problem for which blame is being assigned.
Virtue words: These are words in the value
system of the target audience which tend to produce a positive image when
attached to a person or issue. Peace, happiness, security, wise leadership,
freedom, etc., are virtue words.
Slogans: A slogan is a brief striking phrase
that may include labeling and stereotyping. If ideas can be sloganized, they should be, as good slogans are self-perpetuating memes.
See also doublespeak, information warfare, meme, psyops
Techniques of Propaganda Transmission
Common methods for transmitting propaganda messages include news reports,
government reports, historical revision, junk science, books, leaflets,
movies, and posters.
See Also
Public diplomacy, the term used by the USIA to describe its mission
References
- Disinfopedia, the encyclopedia of propaganda
- Howe, Ellic. The Black Game: British Subversive Operations Against the German During the Second World War. London: Futura, 1982.
- Edwards, John Carver. Berlin Calling: American Broadcasters in Service to the Third Reich. New York, Prager Publishers, 1991. ISBN 0-275-93705-7.
- Linebarger, Paul M. A. (aka Cordwainer Smith). Psychological Warfare. Washington, D.C., Infantry Journal Press, 1948.
- Shirer, William L. Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent, 1934-1941. New York: Albert A. Knopf, 1942.
- Much of the information found in Propaganda techniques is take from: "Appendix I: PSYOP Techniques" from "Psychological Operations Field Manual No.33-1" published by Headquarters; Department of the Army, in Washington DC, on 31 August 1979. I'm sure there are copies of this whole manual on the web, I'll try to find a good link soon.
See also:
propaganda film, Logical fallacy, political media, ideology, spin, public relations, marketing, Information warfare, CNN, BBC, agitprop
External links
Propaganda were a 1980s UK pop group signed to Paul Morley and Trevor Horn's ZTT record label.