In Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Attack on Pearl Harbor, inflammatory language is used as a persuasive technique to try and get the citizens of the United States angered and mournful about the bombing of pearl harbor. The point of writing this speech is to persuade Americans to support the war, and that there was a good reason to go to war. Also, he wanted to convince congress to declare war, which minutes later they did. He uses hate filled inflammatory language to appeal to the audience’s emotion, calling it an “unprovoked and dastardly” (Roosevelt 2) attack. By saying this, Roosevelt hopes to make it appear that the bad guys are the Japanese, which they are. He wishes to arouse the American citizens and get them to support his reasons to go to…
Propaganda was an important tool which was used during World was 11. The purpose it played was to change the way people viewed what was happening during the war. Persuasion was used in the form of posters, art, and television in order to change people’s perspectives. Just like anything else in life, there were pros and cons to the formats utilized to do this. One of the pros, which was of the utmost importance, was to boost morale. This would have been effective during this time because of all the fighting and other atrocities that came along with war. A con to this propaganda would have been that it caused people to make invalid assumptions on other races, genders, and cultures.…
enter the war, and as late as mid-November in 1941, the US felt "the most…
Imperialism is a policy. Based on this policy, a country uses diplomacy and military forces to expand its power and influence across the world. This will eventually result in becoming a superpower. When it comes to imperialism, America has a lot to say because it sure was a great imperialist between 1867-1917. Many American believed U.S. had to “expand or explode” because of its fast growing population. When the population grows, industrial production demand for more resources. People start to realize and worry that some of the existing natural resources of the country will eventually dry up. Therefore, economists saw oversea markets a possible safety valve for U.S. internal pressures. As a result, foreign trade was…
American propaganda mainly focused on tearing others down, while Japanese propaganda was mainly based on building Japan up. Dower said, “Racism in the West was markedly characterized by the denigration of others, the Japanese were preoccupied far more exclusively with elevating themselves (pg. 205).”…
Government propaganda played a major role in World War II by promoting national identity and unity. T World War II gave us countless examples of wartime propaganda posters that engaged Propaganda posters, fabricated by both Allied and Axis nations, persuaded their populaces of the justness of their cause. These posters today can be found in museums and online, allowing us all to study different methods of national advertising in times of war.…
There are many techniques that were used in world war II but the most techniques that were used were; Plain folks, Bandwagon, and Appeal to fear.…
“We have used it against those who attacked us without warning...against those who have starved, and beaten and executed American prisoners…” A good point, made by Truman, in stating that, Japan performed a surprise attack on the US. That tactic killed many innocent soldiers and even some civilians; therefore, we retaliated with a way to shorten this tragedy.…
The Japanese were trained from a young age to be militaristic, playing with objects that promoted violence, and were taught that Japan is to be a supreme power and that all others were inferior. Japanese culture dictated how Japanese soldiers were to act, leading to honor suicides and kamikaze attacks. There were few Japanese POWs during the war because the majority would kill themselves before being captured. Japanese viewed Americans as weak and immoral because they did not follow the same honor code. The Japanese dehumanized Americans just as Americans were dehumanizing them. Japanese soldiers were noted for beheading Allied troops, looting homes, and practicing forced labor. These were all justified by their idea that any non-Japanese were subhuman and that they should be treated as such. The Japanese leaders were able to have total obedience to their command and total allegiance to their country from their…
The concept of bushido, and honor was deeply engrained in Japanese culture. Not only were soldiers expected to fight to the death and to never surrender to the enemy, they also dehumanized their opponents. The Imperial Japanese Army had since the United States had entered the war, began propagandizing the enemies they faced. The book War without Mercy gives various examples of how the Japanese public saw and exemplified the United States. The book takes note of one article referred to as “The Bestial American People”. The article refers to the “real meaning of American individualism … in fact, the Americans desired to destroy ‘the divine state of Japan’ simply to gratify their insatiable carnal desires” (Dower 1986, 243). In addition the article the book mentions also portrays Americans as sadists, killing newborns via drowning and torturing Japanese prisoners of war in manners inhumane and cruel. Specifically, the article mentions that American soldiers tortured Japanese soldiers that was characterized as “only beasts and barbarians could do such things… certainly, humans could not” (Dower 1986, 243). The Japanese public and the Imperial army would find justification in the fight against the United States, believing they were combating a nation that was threatened their way of life. The total war mentality and the ideologies the public undertook made it difficult for the United States for the majority of the war to force Japan to surrender. As the United States captured more and more territory from Japan bringing them closer to a possible land invasion, it seemed that Japan was still fighting to the bitter…
One specific type of propaganda used by the Nazis in WWII was the propaganda “fear”. The Nazis used this to persuade the Germans and everyone else if they don’t get rid of the jews no they will overpower and eventually destroy what they had accomplished. The Nazis would use “fear” by making posters, books, speeches, etc. saying if they don’t eliminate the jews the jews would eliminate them. The United States used the propaganda “fear” as well by claiming if they did not lock away the Japanese-Americans we would all be killed because they were “spies”. The United states used the propaganda fear to have the Japanese-Americans incarcerated and to have fellow people believe they were spies. As you see from history the propaganda fear that was…
After Pearl Harbor, the United States and Japan didn’t get along, war in the Pacific erupted and disagreements flourished. For very important reasons of course, neither would go down without a fight and defending their country was important. But, during World War II, the United States wasn’t the only country hated by the Japanese. Especially during World War II, the Japanese didn’t really like anyone, their belief was based off of, they were superior and just better than everyone else. But their main targets for hatred was toward certain ethnic groups like the Chinese, the Koreans, and the Americans. Of course they did target other groups when invading and taking control. The Japanese liked the United States for somethings as well, mostly because…
Even though the outcome of World War II was influenced by the technology utilized by the nations participating in the war, the outcome was also dependent on a manipulative form of information. That manipulative form of information is also known as “propaganda.” During World War II, propaganda was used to effectively: demoralize enemies, spread news, increase country morale, and indoctrinate civilians. Thanks to the use of propaganda, the outcome of the world favored the Allied Powers, but it also affected the core values of societies during and after World War II. World War II propaganda caused the populations of Japan, United States, Great Britain, Germany, and the Soviet Union to change their core value from “treating people ethically and…
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, United States started to create anti-Japanese propaganda, and a lot of it had to do with racism. Many posters, movies, and songs encouraged Americans to have hatred toward Japanese. Americans had so much hatred toward Japanese that they looked at them to be monsters. Americans came up with many hatred nicknames, such as; nip, yellow, Jap.…
Americans believed that Japanese Americans were dangerous. For example a quote from Congressman Rankin states, “These Japs who had been here for generations were making signs, if you please, guiding the Japanese planes.” This implies that Japanese Americans were thought of as spies. This is a false belief based on racism because other statements by Rankin prove him to bias/racists and also there has never been evidence supporting that Japanese Americans worked as spies. Document number three states “a viper in nonetheless a viper wherever the egg is hatched-so a Japanese American, born of Japanese parents-grows up to be a Japanese, not an American.” The quote basically is telling the American People that Japanese Americans are still loyal to Japan and considered “Japanese” even though they are American. Which is in a sense hypocritical because our founding fathers were from England, immigrants themselves, but when they established this country they became Americans, nothing more nothing less. As you can see both these examples are undeniably wrong because they have no evidence to support them, they are just idiotic people who were scared after Pearl Harbor and thought internment was a perfect idea, but they did not realize what it did to those families and how it violated the constitution.…