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  1. In the fall of 1944, Nazi authorities ordered the creation of a propaganda film in Theresienstadt, a ghetto and concentration camp in the German-occupied region of the former Czechoslovakia. 1 The film—a portion of which is featured here—seemed to show Jewish prisoners happy and thriving.

    • August 1944 to 1945
    • 60.0269
    • 00:07:31
    • US Holocaust Memorial Museum
  2. Dec 9, 2016 · The exhibit features historic film footage, propaganda posters, postage stamps, first-person interviews from people who fell victim to the propaganda, and rare artifacts – like a Nazi uniform.

    • Posters
    • Comics
    • Articles and Essays
    • Film
    • Art Exhibitions

    The most striking and memorable examples of the Nazi antisemitic propaganda campaign are seen in the form of posters. Making use of stark imagery and explicit racial messages, this media penetrated all sections of German society, literally painting Jews as outsiders and sinister enemies of ‘ordinary’ Germans. The Nazi propaganda machine also used p...

    Nazi propagandists exploited pre-existing stereotypes to falsely portray Jews. This hateful view painted Jews as an ‘alien race’ that fed off the host nation, poisoned its culture, destroyed its economy and enslaved its workers. Pro-Nazi newspapers, especially Der Stürmer (‘The Attacker’), frequently ran comics or cartoons depicting Jews as dangero...

    Written materials in periodicals and pamphlets took on a more argumentative form, which lent ‘weight’ to the simplistic slogans and caricatures of posters and cartoons. Essays like Kurt Hilmar Eitzen’s 1936 piece ‘Ten Responses to Jewish Lackeys’ were hardly subtle or philosophical, but they provided all manner of reasons to mistrust and hate the J...

    Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels’ projects included antisemitic films such as Jud Süss. The film was based on a popular 1925 historical novel written by Lion Feuchtwanger, a successful author who was in fact Jewish. Director Veit Harlan turned Feuchtwanger’s philosophical story, as well as previous interpretations for film and theatre, on i...

    ‘The Eternal Jew’ exhibition took place in Munich’s German Museum in 1937-38, attracting some 412,300 visitors (more than 5,000 per day) during its first run. These were followed by tours in Vienna and Berlin in 1938-39. Though the Nazi Party line was anti-modern art, the pieces shown at ‘The Eternal Jew’ were distinctly avant-gardein nature, entic...

    • Graham Land
  3. List of Nazi propaganda films. The following is a list of German National Socialist propaganda films. Before and during the Second World War, the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda under Joseph Goebbels produced several propaganda films designed for the general public.

    Release Date
    Original Title
    English Title
    Running Time
    1927
    A Symphony of the Will to Fight
    30 min (ca.)
    1929
    The Nuremberg Convention of the NSDAP
    90 min (ca.)
    June 14, 1933
    Storm Trooper Brand
    94 min
    September 19, 1933
    Hitler Youth Quex Our Flag Leads Us ...
    95 min
  4. Aug 3, 2017 · Over 40 Nazi propaganda films have been listed as restricted in Germany and can only legally be screened under special conditions. Film expert Anne Siegmayer explains why that's still a...

  5. Aug 2, 2016 · Learn how the Nazis used film to create an image of the “national community” and to demonize those they viewed as the enemy, such as the Jews.

  6. On the Texas Homefront, explores the effects of Nazi propaganda and events in Germany on Texas. On display: political cartoons, Texas internment camp oral histories, military uniforms, a draft of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and more.

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