Animal Farm Propaganda Flashcards

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1
Q

What will propaganda often do

A

It will often deliberately arouse farm distrust, and hatred of the opposition

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2
Q

What are different types of propaganda

A
  • use of colloquialism and expressions of brotherhood and fellow-feeling
  • literary or poetic turn of phrase
  • rhetorical questions
  • repetition
  • cliches
  • emotive language often laden with adjectives and adverbs
  • bandwagon or join the crowd
  • testimonial
  • fear
  • logical fallacies
  • glittering generalities or oversimplification
  • name-calling
  • slogans
  • scapegoat
  • outright lie
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3
Q

Literarily or poetic turn of phrase

A

Although the speaker needs to identify as ‘ one of us’ , he must also impress his audience with his superior knowledge

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4
Q

Rhetorical questions

A

The speaker is not looking for an answer, but makes the answer seem obvious – and just to make sure he usually answers he question himself. By pretending to be conducting a dialogue with the audience, he puts across his own point of view

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5
Q

Reply ion

A

By repeating his message, the speaker ensures that it gets across and is imprinted on the listeners’ minds

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6
Q

Cliches

A

The audience is comfortable with familiar phrases and feels, again, that the speaker is ‘one of us’

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7
Q

Emotive language often heavily laden with adjectives and adverbs

A

The emotive language arouses the audience’s fear, anger, etc. and the adjective help to make the language more vivid

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8
Q

Bandwagon or join the crowd

A

The idea us put forth that, “everyone is doing it” or everyone supports the idea or cause, so you should too. It appeals to the conformist in all of us: not one wants to be left out

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9
Q

Testimonial

A

Someone you look up to. Celebrity endorsement – often in advertising. Athletes and entertainers appeal to everyone because of their popularity and supposed credibility

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10
Q

Fear

A

Presents a dreaded circumstance and usually follows with a specific type of behavior that is needed to avoid that horrible circumstance – often used in politics

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11
Q

Logical fallacies

A

Applying logic, one can draw a conclusion from one of more established premises. The premises may be accurate , bet the conclusions are not.
• circular reasoning: something is good because it is good
• faulty cause & effect reasoning: a conclusion that does not logically follow
• misleading information: use statistics to impress or deceive

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12
Q

Glittering generalities or oversimplification

A

A generally accepted virtue is usually employed to stir up favorable outcomes

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13
Q

Name-calling

A

Tie a person or cause to a largely perceived negative image

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14
Q

Slogans

A

Make oversimplified statements that imply action or belief with no thinking

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15
Q

Scapegoat

A

Blame everything that goes wrong on a single person or grip that cannot defend itself

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16
Q

Outright lie

A

Change facts, documents, or the story about what happened.