Techniques of the PropagandistPrevious
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In 1923 Edward L. Bernays wrote the book Crystallizing
Public Opinion and later, in 1928, the text Propaganda, considered
seminal works in the field. "There is propaganda and what I
call impropaganda," said the 98-year-old Bernays impishly, a
few years prior to his death. Propaganda originally meant promoting
any idea or item, but took on its current pejorative sense following
the extensive use of sinister propaganda for malicious goals during
World War I and World War II. While all persuasion uses the techniques
of traditional propaganda, what Bernays calls "impropaganda"is "using
propaganda techniques not in accordance with good sense, good faith,
or good morals...methods not consistent with the American pattern
of behavior based on Judeo-Christian ethics." Bernays, who is
called the "father of public relations,"is worried about
the increased use of "impropaganda"in political campaigns
and has spoken out against it. "Politicians who use techniques
like these lose the faith of the people," says Bernays.
In 1936 Boston merchant Edward Filene helped
establish the short-lived Institute for Propaganda Analysis which sought
to educate Americans to recognize propaganda techniques. Alfred McClung
Lee, Institute director from 1940-42, and his wife Elizabeth Briant
Lee, co-authors of The Fine Art of Propaganda, Social Problems
in America, recently wrote an article in the periodical Propaganda
Review in which they suggested educating the public about propaganda
techniques was an urgent priority. The Lees also discussed the Institute's
symbols for the seven hallmark tricks of the manipulative propagandist:
·
Name
Calling: hanging a bad label on an idea, symbolized by a hand turning
thumbs down;
·
Card
Stacking: selective use of facts or outright falsehoods, symbolized
by an ace of spades, a card signifying treachery;
·
Band
Wagon: a claim that everyone like us thinks this way, symbolized
by a marching bandleader's hat and baton;
·
Testimonial:
the association of a respected or hated person with an idea, symbolized
by a seal and ribbon stamp of approval;
·
Plain
Folks: a technique whereby the idea and its proponents are linked to "people
just like you and me," symbolized by an old shoe;
·
Transfer:
an assertion of a connection between something valued or hated and
the idea or commodity being discussed, symbolized by a smiling Greek
theater mask; and
·
Glittering
Generality: an association of something with a "virtue word" to
gain approval without examining the evidence; symbolized by a sparkling
gem.
The Institute's last newsletter reflected
that "in modern society an element of propaganda is present in
a large portion of human affairs...people need to be able to recognize
this element even when it is serving `good' ends."
The
Sucker Punch Series
·
Buchanan,
Fulani, Perot, & the Reform Party
·
Lenora
Fulani and the Politics of Opportunism
·
Right
Wing Populism
·
Right
Wing Anti-Globalism
·
Conspiracism as
a form of Scapegoating
Visit our other
key pages relating to conspiracism:
Websites
Debunking Conspiracism
Research Skills,
Logic, & Propaganda
Selected
Websites Sites Promoting Conspiracism
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