| Doherty,
M. Nazi Wireless Propaganda: Lord Haw-Haw and
British Public Opinion in the Second World War
Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2000 |
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This
is the first book devoted exclusively to the analysis
of the Nazis' radio effort against the United Kingdom
during the Second World War. It traces the development
of the German propaganda service and looks to erode
the myth surrounding Lord Haw-Haw -the 'superpropagandist'.
Propaganda is presented in context: the purposes behind
it, the changing patterns, themes, styles, and techniques
employed, and the impact upon the target audience
and its morale. An analysis of the Nazi wireless broadcasts
to Britain for the whole of the Second World War reveals
a sophisticated and intelligent propaganda assault
on the social and economic fabric of British society.
In the end the British failed to succumb to the stupefying
effects of Nazi propaganda and they traditionally
congratulate themselves upon the national unity which
immunised them against it. The author argues that
this traditional view disguises a more complex, less
appealing reality.
Edinburgh
University Press Review. Further Details
The book looks at the organisation
behind the broadcasts to the United Kingdom during
the Second World War: the RMVP (German Propaganda
Ministry). It considers the subjects used in broadcasts
during the `Phoney war`, including the type of social
problems in Britain upon which the Nazis focused.
It also discusses the subject matter used during a
time of seemingly `unstoppable victories` for the
Nazis, and also reflects upon how they dealt with
the issue of defeat. The book also considers how the
British, including the state, the media, and the people,
reacted to the broadcasts.
People often felt that they were
not being given enough facts by their own government,
so turned to `Lord Haw-Haw` for information. Along
with other recent books by James Chapman 'The British
at War: Cinema, State and Propaganda' (1998) and Mariel
Grant 'Propaganda and the Role of State in Interwar
Britain' (1994) this book is a converted, well-researched,
PhD thesis dealing with an otherwise under-researched
area in the ever-widening field of British propaganda
studies, with a particular focus upon the highly mythologized
figure of `Lord Haw-Haw`
An interesting extra to the book
is a CD which contains a selection of wartime broadcasts
by `Lord Haw-Haw` and other broadcasters from Germany,
spanning January 1940 to April 1945. It is interesting
that new media has allowed a wider circulation of
such topics, with a reasonable sound quality.
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