[Home]History of Propaganda film

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Revision 13 . . (edit) August 8, 2001 2:07 am by Koyaanis Qatsi
Revision 10 . . May 19, 2001 12:48 am by (logged).72.138.xxx
Revision 9 . . May 18, 2001 6:57 pm by Larry Sanger
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 1c1
A propaganda film is a film, usually a documentary, produced for the express purpose of convincing the viewer of a certain political point.
A propaganda film is a film, often a documentary, produced for the express purpose of convincing the viewer of a certain political point. However, the propaganda is not limited to non-fiction films. Many of the dramatic war films in the early 1940s in the United States were designed to create consensus at the expense of "the enemy." In fact, one of the conventions of the genre that developed during the period was that of a cross-section of the United States which comes together as a crack unit for the good of the country. Arguably one of the earliest propaganda films is The Birth of a Nation, filmed in 1915.

Added: 2a3
Other noted propaganda films:

Removed: 7,8d7
For a hilarious and horrifying subversion of the United States military's 1960s propaganda regarding the safety of radioactive materials, see [The Atomic Cafe]?.


Changed: 13,15c12
See also the 10-volume CD-ROM collection [Our Secret Century]? for its discussion of propaganda and the examples it includes from the United States.

See also propaganda.
See also propaganda. For more discussion of propaganda and some examples of it in short films from the United States, see the 10-volume CD-ROM collection [Our Secret Century]?. And for a hilarious and horrifying subversion of the United States military's 1960s propaganda regarding the safety of radioactive materials, see [The Atomic Cafe]?.

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
Search: