In the years before television, it was widely assumed that the cinema could exercise enormous influence over the mass audience. Governments and revolutionary intellectuals, party politicians and individual filmmakers, all believed that film offered a uniquely effective means of manipulating the ideology of the masses and thus, notwithstanding their very different ideological objectives, films as different as The Battleship Potemkin, Triumph of the Will, and In Which We Serve were all the product of the same assumptions ...
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In the years before television, it was widely assumed that the cinema could exercise enormous influence over the mass audience. Governments and revolutionary intellectuals, party politicians and individual filmmakers, all believed that film offered a uniquely effective means of manipulating the ideology of the masses and thus, notwithstanding their very different ideological objectives, films as different as The Battleship Potemkin, Triumph of the Will, and In Which We Serve were all the product of the same assumptions about the immense power of film as a medium of political propaganda.
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Add this copy of The Power of Film Propaganda: Myth Or Reality? to cart. $49.14, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2000 by UNKNO.
Add this copy of The Power of Film Propaganda: Myth Or Reality? to cart. $59.37, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2000 by Cassell.