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Christians and Jews in Pomerania 1815-1914 : the mobilisation of antisemitic prejudice in rural communitiesNicholls, Stephen Cameron Jalil January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Unconquerable Defiance: Richmond Newspapers and Confederate Defeat, 1864-1865Berler, Anne K. 01 January 2007 (has links)
This thesis describes and analyses how the Richmond press operated as a propaganda machine during the final year of the Civil War. It argues that the newspapers of the Confederate capital regularly exploited the propaganda value of the news they reported, employing methods including distortion of facts and libelous personal attacks. They displayed a seemingly total disregard for veracity in their zeal to convince their readership that the cause was not lost, and created a false picture of the real situation to a population which was war-weary and desperate for reassurance that victory was still possible. Defeats were minimized and even the tiniest victory in the most insignificant skirmish was magnified. When the Northern army began its strategy of hard war, the Richmond press seized on that to help create a demonized portrait of the Yankee and the North.
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Marketing Cold War tourism in the Belgian Congo : a study in colonial propaganda 1945-1960Wigley, Andrew Paul 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study focuses on the nascent colonial tourist sector of the Belgian Congo from 1945 until
independence in 1960. Empire in Africa was the last remaining vestige of might for the depleted
European imperial powers following the Second World War. That might, however, was largely
illusory, especially for Belgium, which had been both defeated and occupied by Germany. Post-war
Belgium placed much value on its colonial role in the Belgian Congo, promoting and marketing its
imperial mission to domestic and international audiences alike. Such efforts allowed Belgium to
justify a system that was under fire from the new superpowers of the United States of America (USA)
and the Soviet Union. This thesis makes the case that the Belgian authorities recognised the
opportunity to harness the ‘new’ economic activity of tourism to help deliver pro-colonial
propaganda, particularly to the USA which had a growing affluent class and where successive
administrations were keen to encourage overseas travel. In building a tourism sector post the Second
World War, efforts in diversifying the economy were secondary to the objective of using the
marketing of tourism to actively position and promote Belgium’s long-term involvement in the
Congo.
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