孙远工具箱.doc
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1、【精品文档】如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流孙远工具箱.精品文档.孙远的工具箱传媒类1宣传技术(propaganda techniques)Todays AdvertisingPropaganda is not just the tool of totalitarian governments and dictators. Rather, propaganda is all around usin the form of commercials and advertisements. The author of this selection shows how Madison Aven
2、ue uses many of the techniques typical of political propaganda to convince us that we need certain products and services. American adults and children alike, are being seduced. They are being brainwashed. And few of us protest. Why? Because the seducers and the brain washers are the advertisers we w
3、illingly invite into our homes. We are victims, contenteven eagerto be victimized. We read advertisers propaganda messages in newspapers and magazines; we watch their alluring images on the television. We absorb their messages and images into our subconscious. We all do iteven those of us who claim
4、to see through advertisers tricks and therefore feel immune to advertisers charm. Advertisers lean heavily on propaganda to sell their products, whether the “products” are a brand of toothpaste, a candidate for office, or a particular political viewpoint.Propaganda is a systematic effort to influenc
5、e peoples opinions, to win them over to a certain view or side. Propaganda is not necessarily concerned with what is true or false, good or bad. Propagandists simply want people to believe the messages being sent. Often, propagandists will use outright lies or more subtle deceptions to sway peoples
6、opinions. In a propaganda war, any tacit is considered fair.Indeed, the vast majority of us are targets in advertisers propaganda war. Every day, we are bombarded with slogans, print ads, commercials, packaging claims, billboards, trademarks, logos, and the designer brands-all forms of propaganda. O
7、ne study reports that each of us, during an average day, is exposed to over five hundred advertising claims of various types. This saturation may even increase in the future since current trends include ads on movie screens, shopping carts, videocassettes, even public television. Advertisers use sev
8、en types of propaganda techniques: 1)Name callingName calling is a propaganda tacit in which negatively charged names are hurled against the opposing side or competitor. By using such names, propagandists try to arouse the feeling of mistrust, fear, and hate in their audiences.Political advisement m
9、ay label an opposing candidate a “loser”, “fence-sitter”, or “warmonger”Products: An American manufacturer may refer, for instance, to a “foreign car” in its commercialnot to a “imported” one. The label of foreignness will have unpleasant connotations on many peoples mind.2)Glittering GeneralitiesUs
10、ing glittering generalities is the opposite of name calling. In this case, advertisers surround their products with attractive-and slipperywords and phrases. They use vague terms that are difficult to define and that may have different meanings to different people: freedom, democratic, all-American,
11、 progressive, Christian, and justice. Many such words have strong, affirmative overtones. This kind of language stirs positive feelings in people, feelings that may spill over to the product or idea being pitched. As with the name calling, the emotional response may overwhelm logic. Target audiences
12、 accept the product without thinking very much about what the glittering generalities meanor whether they even apply to the product. After all, how can anyone oppose “truth, justice, and the American way”?Politics: The ads for politicians and political causes often use glittering generalities becaus
13、e such “buzz words” can influence votes. Election slogans include high-sounding but basically empty phrases.Products: Ads for consumer goods are also sprinkles with glittering generalities. Product names, for instance, are supposed to evoke good feelings.3)TransferIn a transfer, advertisers try to i
14、mprove the image of a product by associating it with a symbol most people respect, like the American flag or Uncle Sam. The advertisers hope that the prestige attached to the symbol will carry over to the product.Product: Lincoln Insurance shows a profile of the president; Continental Insurance port
15、rays a Revolutionary war minuteman.Corporations also use the transfer technique when they sponsor prestigious shows on radio and televisions. These shows function as symbols of dignity and class.In this way, corporations can reach an educated, influential audience and, perhaps, improve their public
16、image by associating themselves with quality programming.Politics: Ads for political candidate often show either the Washington Monument, a Fourth of July parade, the stars and Stripes, a bald eagle soaring over mountains, or a white-steepled church on the village green. The national anthem or “Amer
17、ica the Beautiful” may play softly in the background.4)TestimonialThe testimonial is one of advertisers most-loved and most-used propaganda techniques. Similar to the transfer device, the testimonial capitalizes on the admiration people have for celebrity to make the product shine more brightlyeven
18、though the celebrity is not an expert on the product being sold.Print and television ads offer a nonstop parade of testimonials: heres Cher for Holiday Spas; heres basketball star Michael Jackson sings about Pepsi.5)Plain forksThe plain folks approach says, in effect, “Buy me or vote for me, Im just
19、 like you.” And how do these folksy warmhearted (usually saccharine) scenes affect us? Theyre supposed to make us feel that AT&Tthe multinational corporate gianthas the same values as we do. Similarly, we are introduced to the little people at Ford, the ordinary folks who work on the assembly line,
20、not to bigwigs in their executive offices. Whats the purpose of such an approach? To encourage us buy a car built by honest, hardworking “everyday Joes” who care about quality as much as we do.Politics: candidates wear hard hats, farmer caps, and assembly-line coveralls. They jog around the block an
21、d carry their own luggage through the airport. The idea is to convince people that the candidates are average people, not the elitenot wealthy lawyers or executives but the common citizen.Bandwagonuse many people have deep desire not to de different.Politics: Political ads tell us to vote for the “w
22、inning candidate.” The advertisers know we tend to feel comfortable doing what others do; we cant to be on the winning team. Or ads show a series of people proclaiming, “Im voting for the Senator. I dont know why anyone wouldnt.” Again, the audience feels under pressure to conform.Why do these propa
23、ganda techniques work? Why do so many of us buy the products, viewpoints, and candidates urged on us by propaganda messages? They work because they appeal to our emotions, not to our minds. Often, in fact, they capitalize on our prejudices and biases. For example, if we are convinced that environmen
24、talists are radicals who want to destroy Americas record of industrial growth and progress, then we will applaud the candidate who refers to them as “treehuggers.” Clear thinking requires hard work: analyzing a claim, researching the facts, examining both sides of an issue, using logic to see the fl
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