Propaganda Piece



Propaganda is generally defined as the communication of ideas, information, and rumors for the purpose of influencing opinions in support for or against a particular cause through emotional appeals; Propaganda Pieces (or just 'propaganda') are works produced through this method and commonly employed for this purpose.

In short, it's that thing you're not immune to.

The Propaganda Piece can be thought of as a deliberate Author Tract, which naturally means a lot of overlap between the tropes. Author Tracts are distinct in that they tend to be more personal to the creator in question, and can often be an unintended result of their choice in themes and/or their ability (or inability) to effectively communicate those themes and ideas, though it can also be very much intentional if said ideas are close to or part of their beliefs. Conversely, the Propaganda Piece is usually far less ambiguous (if at all) about its purpose as such, and is often the result of an effort to garner support for an organization or institution; those that create and/or commission the propaganda themselves are often Propaganda Machines.

The concept of propaganda is Older Than Feudalism, with examples dating as far back as around 515 BCE; the term itself is Older Than Steam, and was derived in 1622 from a then-new administrative body of the Catholic Church called the "Congregatio de Propaganda Fide" (Congregation for Propagating the Faith), which was focused on "propagating" the Catholic faith in non-Catcholic countries. The negative connotations surfaced once it entered political lexicons in the mid-19th century.

Despite the unsavory and manipulative connotations associated with the term in modern times, "propaganda" is considered a historically neutral term, and there's quite a difference between a regular persuasive 'argument' designed to reinforce its proponents' own beliefs and an entire work dedicated to the same; likewise, there is also a difference between works that nakedly serve the purpose of propaganda at the expense of all else and those that are 'merely' poorly written - and both may still give off airs of "Do Not Do This Cool Thing", or else generally not helping their case, especially if its Aesop is broken.

Put simply, it's easy to finger a work as propaganda over nothing, especially for simply challenging your beliefs, and those who make "actual" propaganda will naturally not be that open about their purposes. Except when they are.

In terms of serving essential functions, many religions are naturally inclined towards spreading news of their faith. There is also some overlap with Public Service Announcements, which are designed to increase public attention towards matters of health and safety - as with many a form of Anvilicious media, Some Anvils Need to Be Dropped.

Subtropes include:
 * Attack of the Political Ad
 * Counterproductive Propaganda
 * "Join the Army," They Said
 * Scare Campaign
 * Demonization
 * Wartime Cartoon

Compare:


 * Do Not Do This Cool Thing, when the propaganda fails to properly "smear" its target in the eyes of its audience.
 * Misaimed Fandom, when a group of people take away a 'wrong' or otherwise unintended message from the propaganda.
 * Straw Man Has a Point, when the propaganda's argument is more poorly constructed than that of its imagined-or-otherwise opposition.
 * Streisand Effect, when propaganda attempts to draw attention away from something, but achieves the exact opposite instead.
 * War Is Glorious and War Is Hell, often employed by pro/anti-war propaganda respectively.
 * The War on Straw, where the opposing position is more "manufactured".

Contrast:


 * Samizdat in the original sense.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Political? and What Do You Mean It's Not Didactic?: these can occur when a work is thought to be propaganda.

Compare and contrast Anvilicious. Often used to Scare'Em Straight. May be a sign that Big Brother Is Watching or Employing You. See also Canned Orders Over Loudspeaker, Patriotic Fervor, and Propaganda Machine.

Comic Books

 * Block 109 has Der Ritter, a series of movies and comic books designed to promote Nazi German "hero" Ritter Germania by portraying him as a patriotic Super Soldier.

Literature

 * In The Hunger Games, the rebels employ these to turn people against the Capitol.
 * The Warhammer 40,000 universe has plenty of examples within its Black Library novels.
 * The Imperial Infantryman's Uplifting Primer is a propaganda booklet for soldiers serving in the Imperial Guard. Unfortunately for them, much of the information is... outdated to say the least.

Music

 * Doctor Steel has various Public Service Announcements that focus heavily upon the power of imagination and of improving your general life. He is not only quite open about calling the propaganda he produces propaganda, he's skilled enough to get away with it, too; it helps that he's an Anti-Villain out to build a Utopian Playland where creativity and originality can thrive.

General and Multimedia Examples

 * Anti-digital piracy campaigns tend to fall under this, though they're usually counterproductive more often than not.
 * During the 1920s, when alcohol was outlawed in the US, some wineries would sell grape juice in wine bottles - peeling off the label would reveal instructions on the back that the drinker wasn't supposed to follow in order to avoid turning to juice into wine.
 * PETA is notorious for their pro-vegan ad campaigns, which are also considered to be by and large counterproductive, if not outright exploitative or bigoted in quite a few instances.
 * Cooking Mama, The Unauthorized PETA Edition shows Mama brutally killing and gruesomely preparing a turkey with cartoonish graphics. Game developer Raph Koster explains that his kids found it gleeful fun, and even Nintendo apparently found it amusing, given that their response was to have Cooking Mama herself put out a press release complaining about it.
 * The Satanic Panic generated a wellspring of anti-Dungeons & Dragons propaganda, most of which would go on to age quite poorly.
 * Astroturfing campaigns both online and offline are often a form of this, with online 'turfing usually employing Sock Puppet farms and the occasional real sympathetic volunteer.

Advertising

 * The "Daisy" advertisement - it ran once in 1964 during that year's presidential campaign. Its use of propaganda techniques is credited with costing Goldwater the presidency and giving Lyndon B. Johnson a landslide victory.

Comic Books

 * The biggest names in the modern comics industry largely got their start through their contributions to the American effort for World War II, which is touched on briefly here.
 * Captain America originated as a comic intended to rally support against the Nazis from a non-intervening America; the famous Issue #1 cover shows Cap in his iconic red-white-and-blue costume punching Adolf Hitler, and post-WWII he would be seen fighting Communists.
 * Superman himself is no stranger to this as well; some of the oldest well-known examples include Superman #18, World's Finest #8 and the infamous Action Comics #58. Note that all three of these covers double as advertising for war bonds and stamps to "fight" the Japanese with (though only the thread actually features a racist caricature of them). The Comics Detective site author Ken Quattro offers his take on Superman and his presence in America's political image here, and promotional booklets and signs are among some of the rarest Superman collectibles.
 * Jack Chick's infamous Chick Tracts, free comics intended to disseminate the author's radical Christian views.
 * Is This Tomorrow: America Under Communism was released in 1947 to warn about communism.

Film

 * Don't Be a Sucker has a Hungarian immigrant, who's a professor, speaks to an American man who was watching a gathering. The film was designed to warn viewers of the dangers of prejudice against ethnic and religious minorities and immigrants. The professor describes his experience living in Nazi Germany as an example of what happens if one too many fall for the propaganda.
 * The short film Red Nightmare has a man named Jerry experience what the United States would be like under the Communist system. The film explains the dangers of communism, including the stripping of one's freedom.
 * Both the original Sparkling Red Star (created in 1974) and its animated remake (2007) focuses on a young man named Pan Dongzi, who seeks to join the Red Army after witnessing the tyrannical landlord and his henchmen attack his village, killing Pan's mother in the process; the work is centered around painting communism in a positive light.
 * Disney's Education for Death is a Wartime Cartoon that focuses on a young German boy named Hans and his upbringing in Nazi Germany. The film goes into details on Hans' "education", which is really indoctrination into the Nazi party and eventually life as a soldier.
 * Super Size Me is Morgan Spurlock's documentary exposing the evils of junk food, and was meant to turn people against the fast food industry Mmmm, burgers. More pressingly, Counterproductive Propaganda

Literature

 * Uncle Tom's Cabin was written by Harriet Beecher Stowe in order to further abolitionism through showing the evils of slavery.
 * Lolita was written with the intent of being a thorough condemnation of pedophilia, served in part by having the narrator be a pedophile trying desperately to justify his actions and clearly unable to stand himself - though it may have been just a bit too thorough, as seen by the fact that lolicon is now a commonly recognized "fandom".
 * Discussed in Adolf Hitler's 1925 book Mein Kampf, where he mentions the use of a lie so "colossal" that no one would believe that someone "could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously". Hitler believed this "Big Lie" was used by Jews to blame Germany's loss in World War I on German general Erich Ludendorff, who was a prominent nationalist and anti-Semitic political leader in the Weimar Republic. He, Joseph Goebbels and the Nazis would later use their own Big Lie to turn long-standing anti-Semitism into mass murder with the narrative of an innocent, besieged Germany striking back at an "international Jewry", which was blamed for World War I.

New Media

 * The page image depicting Garfield originated from a Tumblr post made in 2018. Created by Mark Vomit, it has undergone a Memetic Mutation and spawned many variants. Ironically, Markvomit would go on to be caught up in the NFT craze, which billed itself as "the definitive way of owning digital art" but in reality is a "pay to own a hyperlink associated with this image" deal.
 * The realities of internet have led to a curious situation: it's very hard to block or actively counter propaganda, but at the same time, risk of backfire for the attacker is very high — most contemporary mass media platforms don't work well enough to avoid contempt even in the USA, and various attempts to implement "divide and conquer" policies (like Google's "this video is unavailable in your country" and Great Chinese Firewall) do more to annoy people than actually hiding anything from anyone who really wants to see it.
 * The winning strategy for many propagandists is simple and widespread: among those most hostile to you, find a handful of the most easily manipulated (and who doesn't have those kinds of people?), and give them as much exposure as you can.
 * Parodied in this Something Awful thread of Digital Piracy mockup posters.
 * TruthorFiction is a site dedicated to analyzing and debunking rumors on the Web in a similar vein to Snopes, but is a bit more thorough in their analysis (e.g. restoring assertions to their original context), and naturally has several posts discussing propaganda - including a set of posts written by contributor Brooke Binkowski on recognizing and combating propaganda.

Video Games

 * Ethnic Cleansing is a notorious example of white supremacist propaganda. As one guessed, a player can choose a neo-Nazi, a Skinhead, or a Klansman to travel and kill non-white races such as Blacks, before going on to the Jews.
 * Accusations of propaganda have been lobbed at the Call of Duty franchise more and more as newer entries are released - and with some of the more questionable decisions the series has made recently, it's a bit tough to argue against.

Web Original
"[…] if the Soviet went out of their way to prevent western propaganda from reaching the Soviet people, the Russians are nowadays doing the exact opposite: they are going out of their way to make sure that western propaganda is immediately translated and beamed into every single Russian household. What I propose to do today is to share with you a few recent examples of what Russian households are regularly exposed to. By now, you must have heard about the CNN report about how the evil Russkies used Pokemon to destabilize and subvert the US. [...]In Russia this report was in[sic] instant mega-success: the video was translated and rebroadcasted on every single TV channel. Margarita Simonian, the brilliant director of Russia Today, was asked during a live show “be truthful and confess – what is your relationship with Pokemon, do they work for you?” to which she replied “I feed them” – the audience burst in laughter."
 * The article Re-Visiting Russian Counter-Propaganda Methods by "The Saker" on The Unz Review explores the nature of propaganda in the modern age, with one of its cited examples being a CNN report that attempted to link Russian interference (commonly said to have an impact on the election of Donald Trump) to Tumblr, YouTube and... Pokemon Go?
 * One can imagine that CNN was a little too expectant that viewers would take them at their word - at least, the comments on the video seem to support the idea that such reports only serve to erode trust in American media.
 * The article uses the video itself to argue that the inverse has become true as well:

Other Media

 * The iconic 1917 poster of Uncle Sam, a personification of the U.S. government. The poster was created by James Montgomery Flagg during World War I, with the text "I WANT YOU; the image was inspired by a British recruitment poster showing Lord Kitchener in a similar pose, and was used to recruit for both World Wars. This poster would codify the modern appearance of Uncle Sam himself.
 * Innocent, lovely and wholesome children in idyllic happiness, or else threatened by harm, are a popular subject and theme of propaganda images, as shown in these posters: Australian, British, German, American, Japanese, and French.
 * This image of a 1950s PSA features Superman telling children not to disrespect their peers on the basis of race, religion or national origin, calling it "un-American".