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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 Jews in the U.S. and the leadership of Franklin D. Roosevelt, [126] who succeeded Winston Churchill in Nazi propaganda as "World-Enemy Number One". [127]
A propaganda poster supporting the boycott declared that "in Paris, London, and New York German businesses were destroyed by the Jews, German men and women were attacked in the streets and beaten, German children were tortured and defiled by Jewish sadists", and called on Germans to "do to the Jews in Germany what they are doing to Germans abroad."
British propaganda poster that depicts women as bravely seeing their men off to war. Propaganda and its ideological impacts on women and family life in the era differed by country. British propaganda often promoted the idea that women and their families were threatened by the enemy, particularly the German Army. [50]
The poster was drawn as hanging on a wall in a 1995 poster created by Gabor Baksay. [15] In September 2021, a modified version of this painting was used in Novosibirsk to promote vaccination against the COVID-19. [16] Lissitzky's Revenge is a game based on Lissitzky's propaganda posters from 1919. It was developed in 2015 and uses paper-cuts as ...
Posters during the Cold War focused primarily on depictions of Stalin and his positive effects on East Germany. The information on the posters was used to convince the German people that the institutions of the Soviet Union would perpetuate a peaceful socialist society. Many other posters were used to depict the allied forces in a negative ...
Russian èmigré anti-Bolshevik poster, c. 1932 "Down with Bolshevism!"- Nazi propaganda poster in Russian for occupied Soviet territories. Polish anti-Soviet propaganda poster during the Polish–Soviet War, depicting Leon Trotsky.
The Nazi party's doctrine of Lebensraum was central to its programme of waging a racial war against Russia, a geopolitical agenda advanced by Hitler since the 1920s. [86] During the final months of the Second World War, Nazi Germany intensified its anti-Semitic, anti-Slavic, and anti-communist propaganda.
The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda during the World War II and the Holocaust. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674038592. Heyen, Franz Josef [in German] (1983). Parole der Woche: eine Wandzeitung im Dritten Reich 1936–1943 (in German). Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag. ISBN 978-3423029360. Schmidt, Palle (1982). Sort propaganda (in Danish ...