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Propaganda

New pedagogy article: Tim Turner on “Visual Rhetoric and Propaganda”

Submitted by John Jones on Wed, 2008-04-23 09:19. |

propaganda posterTim Turner has posted a new pedagogical article, “Visual Rhetoric and Propaganda,” in viz.’s assignments section. The article explains why rhetoric instructors should teach their students about the methods of propagandists, and outlines a course unit based on the topic. In the article, he argues that conversations about the use of visuals in propaganda

are useful because they illuminate for students a range of rhetorical possibilities, including the fact that “bad” arguments can be quite influential and that modes of persuasion cannot (and should not) be divorced from ethical considerations. From this perspective, discussions of propaganda may also be useful in that they help illuminate discussions of the fallacies of argument (in which case, “bad” is taken to mean specious, illogical, or poorly reasoned). But discussions of propaganda may also lead to discussions of the ethical dimensions of persuasion (in which case “bad” is taken to mean ethically or morally suspect).

Shepherd Fairey Has a Posse

Submitted by erinhurt on Mon, 2007-11-05 14:49. | | |

I remember when I used to live in Portland in the late 90s, and I would see these stickers of Andre the Giant in all the bus stops. I never knew what they meant, but I liked them well enough to peel one off a bus stop wall and stick it on my bike.
Shepherd Fairey's

Dove onslaught

Submitted by mkhaupt on Thu, 2007-10-18 16:20. | | | | |

Dove expertly uses visual rhetoric to combat the insidious forces of ... visual rhetoric.


Black sheep and propaganda

Submitted by timturner on Wed, 2007-10-10 08:20. | | | |

An election poster reading

This poster is a political advertisement for the SVP (in English, the "Swiss People's Party"), a far-right political party in Switzerland that has made anti-immigration policies a centerpiece of its campaign in an upcoming election. The posters have been controversial: the tagline reads "to create security," and the image depicts three white sheep booting the black sheep from the swiss flag, presumably symbolic of Swiss territory.

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