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  1. This poster, which I think is from 1940, urges Germans to obey the blackout regulations. The text translates as: “The enemy sees your light! Black out!”

  2. The Nazi Party spread antisemitic propaganda to help garner support for many anti-Jewish policies that led ultimately to genocide. Antisemitic handbills, posters, and stickers An assortment of antisemitic handbills, posters, and stickers from Germany, 1919.

  3. 30 lis 2020 · The Nazis made extensive use of propaganda to cement their reign of terror. An illustrated book looks at the psychological manipulation behind Nazi poster art.

  4. As their first major anti-Semitic action after taking power, the Nazis organzed a nation-wide anti-Jewish boycott on 1 April 1933, alegedly to protest anti-German actions by Jews around the world. This poster announces the boycott in the town of Geisenheim.

  5. The Nazis effectively used propaganda to win the support of millions of Germans in a democracy and, later in a dictatorship, to facilitate persecution, war, and ultimately genocide. The stereotypes and images found in Nazi propaganda were not new, but were already familiar to their intended audience.

  6. 5 lut 2024 · This visual essay includes a selection of Nazi propaganda images, both “positive” and “negative.” It focuses on posters that Germans would have seen in newspapers like Der Stürmer and passed in the streets, in workplaces, and in schools. Some of these posters were advertisements for traveling exhibits—on topics like “The Eternal ...

  7. Background: This is a collection of Nazi posters from 1920-33. Clicking will bring up a larger image. Posters from 1933-1945 are on another page. Many are taken from photographs made by Dr. Robert D. Brooks at the German Federal Archives. I have gathered the remainder from a wide range of sources.

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