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LN307-15 Propaganda and Persuasion in Modern Europe

Department
School of Modern Languages and Cultures
Level
Undergraduate Level 2
Module leader
Leticia Villamediana Gonzalez
Credit value
15
Module duration
10 weeks
Assessment
100% coursework
Study location
University of Warwick main campus, Coventry

Introductory description

This module examines the role played by propaganda in modern Europe (from 1930 to 1975). In particular, we will look at how propaganda has been created, disseminated and received in France, Germany, Italy and Spain.

Module web page

Module aims

The aim of this module is to explore the ways in which propaganda has shaped modern Europe in the twentieth century and continues to shape Europe today. This will be done through close textual and film analysis of a range of different materials - from film to posters and from radio programmes to cartoons and caricatures - examining the diverse ways in which propaganda has been produced and received across linguistic, cultural and national borders.

Outline syllabus

This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.

Week 1. Introduction to propaganda in modern Europe.
To include an overview of definitions of propaganda, theories of propaganda production, engagement with principal secondary material. *All seminars and lectures will engage with material in the target language AND in translation to ensure the material is accessible to students from across the School. Lectures and seminars will be delivered in English.

Week 2. Propaganda in Spain during the Civil War (1936-1939)
The lecture and seminar this week will focus on the primary types of images used by propagandists of both the Republican and Franco's fronts during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). We will mainly focus on visual culture, exploring issues such as culture and art, gender and atrocity propaganda.

Week 3. Propaganda during Franco's Regime (1939-1975)
This week we will look at the control and manipulation of public opinion during Franco's dictatorship (1939-1975), focusing on the use and manipulation of myths and history, as well as on the role of education, media and Fascist institutions.

Week 4. Propaganda in Germany, 1940-1944
The lecture and seminar this week will consider the ways in which propaganda was produced and received in Germany during the Nazi regime in World War II and in particular the imposition of Goëbbels’s maxims of propaganda.

Week 5. Propaganda in Germany
The lecture and seminar for this session will look at the Nazi government’s dissemination and use of “atrocity propaganda” to legitimate its invasion of Poland, in particular, and to boost the morale of the military and the civilian population as defeat looked increasingly likely. In this regard, the role of gender in atrocity propaganda will be a central theme.

Week 6. Reading Week.

Week 7. Propaganda in Italy: the cult of the Duce in Fascist Italy: 1922 - 1945
The lecture and seminar this week will offer an overview of the ways in which Fascism established itself through various forms of propaganda, aiming to create a powerful cult of the Italian dictator Mussolini. Examples will include visual art, speeches and other initiatives which targeted all sectors of society.

Week 8. Propaganda in Italy: the ‘cult of youth’ from Risorgimento to Fascism
The lecture and seminar this week will focus more specifically on the central role played by Italian youth during the period leading to the unification of Italy (1871). Discussion will centre around the ways in which youth became a very powerful political and symbolic category, and will show how the same themes would be later appropriated and revised by Fascist propaganda (1922 – 1945).

Week 9. Propaganda in France and the francophone world I: 1933-1954
The lecture and seminar this week will offer an overview of the ways in which propaganda was produced and received in various forms in the course of French history from the final years of the Third French Republic via the Occupation of France and Vichy regime in World War II to the outbreak of the Algerian War of Independence.

Week 10. Propaganda in France and the francophone world II: 1954-1974
The lecture and seminar this week will offer an overview of the ways in which propaganda was produced and received in France and the francophone world from the Algerian War of Independence to the end of the Gaullist period with the death of Georges Pompidou in 1974.

Learning outcomes

By the end of the module, students should be able to:

  • Greater insight into the ways in which propaganda has been produced and received in modern Europe.
  • Refined knowledge and understanding of the definition of propaganda in a range of contexts.
  • Intercultural awareness, understanding and competence.
  • Ability, willingness and openness to engage with other cultures, appreciating their distinctive features
  • Knowledge, awareness and understanding of one or more cultures and societies, other than their own.
  • Ability to access, read and critically analyse primary and secondary source materials in target language
  • Knowledge of aspects of the cultures, communities and societies where target language is used
  • Familiarity with the methodologies and approaches appropriate to the discipline

Indicative reading list

Week 1. Introduction
Barnouw, Erik, Documentary: A History of the non-fiction film (Oxford: OUP, 1993)
Eagleton, Terry, Ideology: An Introduction (London: Verso, 2007)
Grierson, John, ‘Documentary: The Bright Example,’ in Forsyth Hardy (Ed.), Grierson on Documentary (London: Faber and Faber, 1966)
Griffin, Roger, (Ed.) Fascism: a Reader (Oxford: OUP, 1995)
Jowett, Garth and Victoria O’Donnell, Propaganda and Persuasion (London: Sage, 2011)
Taylor, Philip, Munitions of the Mind: A History of Propaganda from the ancient world to the present day (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2003)

Weeks 2 and 3. Spain
Basilio, Miriam, ‘Genealogies for a New State: Painting and Propaganda in Franco’s Spain, 1936-1940’, Discourse, 24 (2002), 67-94
Bloomfield, Imogen, 'Photographs of Child Victims in Propaganda Posters of the Spanish Civil War', Modern Languages Open, 1 (2018).
Folch-Serra, Mireya, ‘Propaganda in Franco’s Time’, Bulletin of Spanish Studies, 89 (2012), 227-240
Payne, Stanley G., The Spanish Civil War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012)
Sevillano, Francisco, ‘What was Public Opinion in the Francoist ‘New State’? Information, Publics and Rumour in the Spanish Postwar (1939-1945)’, in The Configuration of the Spanish Public Sphere: From the Enlightenment to the Indignados, ed. by David Jimenez Torres and Leticia Villamediana González (New York/London: Berghahn Books, 2019)

Weeks 4 and 5. Germany
Fox, Jo, Film Propaganda in Britain and Nazi Germany. World War II Cinema (Oxford: Berg, 2007)
Garden, Ian, The Third Reich’s Celluloid War: Propaganda in Nazi Feature Films, Documentaries and Television (Stroud: The History Press, 2012)
Welch, David, Propaganda and the German Cinema, 1933-1945 (London: I.B. Tauris, 2001)

Weeks 7 and 8. Italy
De Grazia, Victoria, The Culture of Consent: Mass organization of leisure in fascist Italy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981)
Williams, Manuela A., Mussolini’s Propaganda Abroad: Subversion in the Mediterranean and the Middle-East, 1935-1940 (London: Routledge, 2006)
Gundle, Duggan and Pieri, The Cult of the Duce: Mussolini and the Italians (Manchester University Press, 2013)

Weeks 9 and 10. France

Bowles, Brett, ‘The Attempted Nazification of French cinema, 1934-1944,’ in Roel Vande Winkel and David Welch (Eds.), Cinema and the Swastika: The International Expansion of Third Reich Cinema (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011) pp.130-145
Lees, David, ‘Waging the War of Words: Propaganda and Persuasion in Modern France,’ in Aurelien Mondon, Nina Parish, David Lees and Marion Demossier (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of French Politics and Culture (London: Routledge, 2017)
Rossignol, Dominique, Histoire de la propagande en France de 1940 à 1944: l’utopie Pétain (Paris: PUF, 1991)
Wharton, Steve, Screening Reality : Documentary Film under the German Occupation, 1940-1944 (Bern: Peter Lang, 2004)

View reading list on Talis Aspire

International

All modules delivered in SMLC are necessarily international. Students engage with themes and ideas from a culture other than that of the UK and employ their linguistic skills in the analysis of primary materials from a non-Anglophone context. Students will also be encouraged to draw on the experiences of visiting exchange students in the classroom and will frequently engage with theoretical and critical frameworks from across the world.

Subject specific skills

This module will develop students’ linguistic skills through engaging with primary materials in the target language. It will build students’ capacity to engage with aspects of European culture through analysis of this primary material and through seminar discussion aimed at deeper critical thinking. In particular, students’ awareness of propaganda and persuasion in Modern Europe will be enhanced through lectures and seminars which engage in scholarship in the field.

Transferable skills

All SMLC culture modules demand critical and analytical engagement with artefacts from target-language cultures. In the course of independent study, class work and assessment students will develop the following skills: written and oral communication, creative and critical thinking, problem solving and analysis, time management and organisation, independent research in both English and their target language(s), intercultural understanding and the ability to mediate between languages and cultures, ICT literacy in both English and the target language(s), personal responsibility and the exercise of initiative.

Study time

Type Required
Lectures 9 sessions of 1 hour (6%)
Seminars 9 sessions of 1 hour (6%)
Private study 132 hours (88%)
Total 150 hours

Private study description

No private study requirements defined for this module.

Costs

No further costs have been identified for this module.

You do not need to pass all assessment components to pass the module.

Assessment group A4
Weighting Study time Eligible for self-certification
Assessment component
Video presentation 30% Yes (extension)

10-minute individual video presentation comparing two primary sources

Reassessment component is the same
Assessment component
Assessed Essay 70% Yes (extension)

2250-2500

Reassessment component is the same
Feedback on assessment

Feedback will be provided in the course of the module in a number of ways. Feedback should be understood to be both formal and informal and is not restricted to feedback on formal written work.
Oral feedback will be provided by the module tutor in the course of seminar discussion. This may include feedback on points raised in small group work or in the course of individual presentations or larger group discussion.
Written feedback will be provided on formal assessment using the standard SMLC Assessed Work feedback form appropriate to the assessment. Feedback is intended to enable continuous improvement throughout the module and written feedback is generally the final stage of this feedback process. Feedback will always demonstrate areas of success and areas for future development, which can be applied to future assessment. Feedback will be both discipline-specific and focussed on key transferrable skills, enabling students to apply this feedback to their future professional lives. Feedback will be fair and reasonable and will be linked to the SMLC marking scheme appropriate to the module.

Courses

This module is Optional for:

  • Year 2 of UITA-R310 BA in Italian
  • Year 2 of UFRA-QR3A Undergraduate English and French
  • Year 2 of UGEA-QR32 Undergraduate English and German Literature
  • Year 2 of UHPA-QR34 Undergraduate English and Hispanic Studies
  • Year 2 of UITA-QR33 Undergraduate English and Italian Literature
  • Year 2 of UFRA-R101 Undergraduate French Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1Q1 Undergraduate French Studies and Linguistics
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1Q2 Undergraduate French Studies with Linguistics
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1L4 Undergraduate French and Economics (4-year)
  • Year 2 of UFRA-RR12 Undergraduate French and German Studies
  • Year 2 of UFRA-R1VA Undergraduate French and History
  • Year 2 of UFRA-RR13 Undergraduate French and Italian Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1WB Undergraduate French and Theatre Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A6 Undergraduate French with Arabic
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A0 Undergraduate French with Chinese
  • Year 2 of UFRA-R1WA Undergraduate French with Film Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A2 Undergraduate French with German
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A3 Undergraduate French with Italian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A8 Undergraduate French with Japanese
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A5 Undergraduate French with Portuguese
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A7 Undergraduate French with Russian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R1A4 Undergraduate French with Spanish
  • Year 2 of UGEA-R200 Undergraduate German Studies
  • Year 2 of UGEA-RR23 Undergraduate German Studies and Italian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2Q1 Undergraduate German Studies and Linguistics
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2Q2 Undergraduate German Studies with Linguistics
  • Year 2 of UGEA-RN21 Undergraduate German and Business Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2L4 Undergraduate German and Economics (4-year)
  • Year 2 of UGEA-R2V1 Undergraduate German and History
  • Year 2 of UGEA-RW24 Undergraduate German and Theatre Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2A6 Undergraduate German with Arabic
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2A0 Undergraduate German with Chinese
  • Year 2 of UGEA-RP33 Undergraduate German with Film Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2A1 Undergraduate German with French
  • Year 2 of UGEA-R2M1 Undergraduate German with International Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2A3 Undergraduate German with Italian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2A8 Undergraduate German with Japanese
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2A5 Undergraduate German with Portuguese
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2A7 Undergraduate German with Russian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R2R4 Undergraduate German with Spanish
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R400 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R4L1 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies and Economics (4-year)
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R4V1 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies and History
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R4Q1 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies and Linguistics
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4W4 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies and Theatre Studies
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4T6 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies with Arabic
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4T1 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies with Chinese
  • Year 2 of UHPA-RP43 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies with Film Studies
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4T2 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies with Japanese
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4R5 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies with Portuguese
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4R7 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies with Russian
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3V2 Undergraduate History and Italian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3Q1 Undergraduate Italian Studies and Linguistics
  • Year 2 of UITA-RQ38 Undergraduate Italian and Classics
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3L4 Undergraduate Italian and Economics (4-year)
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3WA Undergraduate Italian and Theatre Studies
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3T6 Undergraduate Italian with Arabic
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3T6 Undergraduate Italian with Arabic
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3T1 Undergraduate Italian with Chinese
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3T1 Undergraduate Italian with Chinese
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3W5 Undergraduate Italian with Film Studies
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3A1 Undergraduate Italian with French
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3A2 Undergraduate Italian with German
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3T2 Undergraduate Italian with Japanese
  • ULNA-R3T2 Undergraduate Italian with Japanese
    • Year 2 of R3T2 Italian with Japanese
    • Year 2 of R3T2 Italian with Japanese
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3R5 Undergraduate Italian with Portuguese
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3R5 Undergraduate Italian with Portuguese
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3R7 Undergraduate Italian with Russian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3R7 Undergraduate Italian with Russian
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R3R4 Undergraduate Italian with Spanish
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3W4 Undergraduate Italian with Theatre Studies
  • Year 3 of ULNA-R902 Undergraduate Modern Language Studies
  • Year 2 of UFRA-R900 Undergraduate Modern Languages
  • Year 2 of ULNA-R9Q2 Undergraduate Modern Languages with Linguistics
  • Year 2 of UPOA-M163 Undergraduate Politics, International Studies and French
  • Year 2 of UPOA-M164 Undergraduate Politics, International Studies and German
  • Year 2 of UPOA-M166 Undergraduate Politics, International Studies and Hispanic Studies
  • Year 2 of UPOA-M165 Undergraduate Politics, International Studies and Italian
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4R1 Undergraduate Spanish Studies and French Studies
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4R2 Undergraduate Spanish Studies and German Studies
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4R3 Undergraduate Spanish Studies and Italian Studies
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4RA Undergraduate Spanish Studies with French
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4RB Undergraduate Spanish Studies with German
  • Year 2 of UHPA-R4RC Undergraduate Spanish Studies with Italian
  • Year 2 of UITA-R3V3 Undergraduate Taught Italian and History of Art
  • Italian with Linguistics
  • Politics, International Studies and French (3-year)
  • Politics, International Studies and German (3-year)
  • Politics, International Studies and Hispanic Studies (3-year)
  • Politics, International Studies and Italian (3-year)
  • R422 Hispanic Studies with Linguistics