LYCOS RETRIEVER Beta Retriever Home  |  What is Lycos Retriever?   
Nazi Propaganda: Germans
built 140 days ago
These two organizations through which Nazis led a frantic propaganda will fight each other for supremacy during this entire period. On one hand, this aspect is similar with the state of affairs in the internal Nazi propaganda where often a tensional struggle between propaganda agents would break up. On the other hand, these tensions were inherent as a result of their overlapping: one was supported by the German Foreign Affairs Ministry – The Steuben Society – and the other by N.S.D.A.P. – F.N.G.A. The leaders of these organizations will often petition the German authorities, trying to cast a bad light on their opponents. Out of this perspective, “The Steuben Society” will have greater chances of success, due to the fact that the activities of F.N.G.A.
An unknown German propaganda film depicts Danish resistance during the WWII as nearly non-existent in comparison with the fight Nazi forces encountered in Norway. The film 'Kampf um Norwegen' (The Fight for Norway), describes the both Denmark's and Norway's resistance to occupation. While the resistance in Norway is presented as a fierce campaign, it suggests that Denmark had been taken with relative ease. Kay Hoffman, film historian and expert in German Second World War documentaries, called the find a minor sensation. Denmark's lack of armed resistance against the German invasion in 1940 has been a controversial issue for Danes.
All these can be certified by tracking the development of the Nazi propaganda in the United States of America, front-runner in world democracy. This was perhaps the greatest challenge Nazi propagandists had to face: trying to bring about major changes inside the American political class, and – what was actually important for them – inside the American public opinion. This is more difficult as the German internal understanding of public opinion was quite different from reality. Public opinion is not just a sum of individual views, but the product of a debate.[3] Nazi messages would ... come under discussion and not be accepted without comments. National-socialists had to take into account that the public is not a homogenous block, as they had shaped it internally.[4]
Nestled among pornographic DVDs at kiosks at Leningradsky Station are numerous discs offering original Nazi propaganda from the 1940s. The DVDs carry the original newsreels that were shown in German cinemas. A DVD on the Nazi SS has a blurb on the back of the box that talks about the troops' "genuine professionalism."
SEARCH
MORE ABOUT