Photo Credit: Artist Shepard Fairey, Obey Giant

 

Public Opinion Series

 

 

Propaganda by Edward Bernays, 1928, Excerpts

 

Modern propaganda is a consistent, enduring effort to create or shape events to influence the relations of the public to an enterprise, idea or group. This practice of creating circumstances and of creating pictures in the minds of millions of persons is very common. Virtually no important undertaking is now carried on without it.

 

Propaganda does exist on all sides of us, and it does change our mental pictures of the world. Its use is growing as its efficiency in gaining public support is recognized. The only propaganda which will ever tend to weaken itself as the world becomes more sophisticated and intelligent is propaganda that is untrue or unsocial.

 

It takes account not merely of the individual, nor even of the mass mind alone, but also and especially of the anatomy of society, with its interlocking group formations and loyalties. It sees the individual not only as a cell in the social organism but as a cell organized into the social unit. Touch a nerve at a sensitive spot and you get an automatic response from certain specific members of the organism.

 

The public is made up of interlocking groups – economic, social, religious, educational, cultural, racial, collegiate, local, sports, and hundreds of others. The whole basis of successful propaganda is to have an objective and then to endeavor to arrive at it through an exact knowledge of the public and modifying circumstances to manipulate and sway that public.

 

Propaganda, since it goes to basic causes, is most effective through the manner of its introduction.

 

Instruments of Propaganda

 

The media by which leaders transmit their messages to the public through propaganda include all the means by which people today transmit their ideas to one another. There is no means of human communication which may not also be a means of deliberate propaganda.

 

The relative value of the various instruments of propaganda, and their relation to the masses, are constantly changing. There are multitudes of other avenues of approach to the public mind, some old, some new as television.

 

The motion picture can standardize the ideas and habits of a nation. Because pictures are made to meet market demands, they reflect, emphasize and even exaggerate broad popular tendencies, rather than stimulate new ideas and opinions.