Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Other questions on the subject: Geography

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Geography, 23.06.2019 04:31, legitmega

Which of the following events did not occur as a result of china’s open-door policy? a. trade between japan and china was encouraged. b. all countries were given equal access to chinese ports. c. foreign influence in china increased. d. the influence of the communist party weakened.

Answers: 1

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

The body paragraphs in an informative essay should include clear examples. a thesis statement. restated evidence. a clear direction.

Answers: 2

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Formidable obstacles of climate, terrain, and distance hinder exploitation of natural resources in russia. true false

Answers: 1

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Why are young eastern european democracies at an increased risk for turmoil during a global recession? a) anger against increased democracy b) failure of the free market system c) government corruption d) lack of from the e. u.

Answers: 3

Do you know the correct answer?

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in conveying...

Questions in other subjects:

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Mathematics, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Geography, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

History, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

English, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Chemistry, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

History, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Business, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Biology, 26.10.2021 14:00

Which of the following statements best explains a limitation of the political map shown in the conveying economic information?

Other questions on the subject: Advanced Placement (AP)

A

Advanced Placement (AP), 16.01.2021 09:13

Which of the following pieces of evidence could best be used to modify foner’s main argument in the second excerpt

A

Advanced Placement (AP), 11.11.2021 23:16

Dual-inheritance theory posits that human behavior is the result of two different processes that develop independently, but interact with each other: biological and cultural evolution. How is this a reflection of the nature-nurture debate?

A

Advanced Placement (AP), 14.12.2021 21:56

How does the reference to the “Royal Menagerie” in paragraph 2 contribute to the effectiveness of Adams’ argument

A

Advanced Placement (AP), 23.09.2021 16:26

Write 2 sentences using the verb approve. in the first sentence, use the verb in passive voice second use the verb in active voice

B

Business, 30.05.2021 04:51

B

Business, 30.05.2021 04:50

B

Business, 30.05.2021 04:49

B

Business, 30.05.2021 04:48

M

Mathematics, 20.05.2021 22:39

B

Biology, 20.05.2021 22:38

M

Mathematics, 20.05.2021 22:37

M

Mathematics, 20.05.2021 22:36

E

English, 20.05.2021 22:33

B

Biology, 20.05.2021 22:33

Home Lifestyles & Social Issues Sociology & Society

Propaganda is the dissemination of information—facts, arguments, rumours, half-truths, or lies—to influence public opinion. Deliberateness and a relatively heavy emphasis on manipulation distinguish propaganda from casual conversation or the free and easy exchange of ideas.

People have employed the principles of propaganda—manipulating the dissemination of information and using symbols in an attempt to influence public opinion—for thousands of years, although the term propaganda, used in this sense, didn’t come about until the 17th century.

propaganda, dissemination of information—facts, arguments, rumours, half-truths, or lies—to influence public opinion.

Propaganda is the more or less systematic effort to manipulate other people’s beliefs, attitudes, or actions by means of symbols (words, gestures, banners, monuments, music, clothing, insignia, hairstyles, designs on coins and postage stamps, and so forth). Deliberateness and a relatively heavy emphasis on manipulation distinguish propaganda from casual conversation or the free and easy exchange of ideas. Propagandists have a specified goal or set of goals. To achieve these, they deliberately select facts, arguments, and displays of symbols and present them in ways they think will have the most effect. To maximize effect, they may omit or distort pertinent facts or simply lie, and they may try to divert the attention of the reactors (the people they are trying to sway) from everything but their own propaganda.

Comparatively deliberate selectivity and manipulation also distinguish propaganda from education. Educators try to present various sides of an issue—the grounds for doubting as well as the grounds for believing the statements they make, and the disadvantages as well as the advantages of every conceivable course of action. Education aims to induce reactors to collect and evaluate evidence for themselves and assists them in learning the techniques for doing so. It must be noted, however, that some propagandists may look upon themselves as educators and may believe that they are uttering the purest truth, that they are emphasizing or distorting certain aspects of the truth only to make a valid message more persuasive, or that the courses of action that they recommend are in fact the best actions that the reactor could take. By the same token, the reactor who regards the propagandist’s message as self-evident truth may think of it as educational; this often seems to be the case with “true believers”—dogmatic reactors to dogmatic religious, social, or political propaganda. “Education” for one person may be “propaganda” for another.

The word propaganda itself, as used in recent centuries, apparently derives from the title and work of the Congregatio de Propaganda Fide (Congregation for Propagation of the Faith), an organization of Roman Catholic cardinals founded in 1622 to carry on missionary work. To many Roman Catholics the word may therefore have, at least in missionary or ecclesiastical terms, a highly respectable connotation. But even to these persons, and certainly to many others, the term is often a pejorative one tending to connote such things as the discredited atrocity stories and deceptively stated war aims of World Wars I and II, the operations of the Nazis’ Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, and the broken campaign promises of a thousand politicians. Also, it is reminiscent of countless instances of false and misleading advertising (especially in countries using Latin languages, in which propagande commerciale or some equivalent is a common term for commercial advertising).

Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content. Subscribe Now

To informed students of the history of communism, the term propaganda has yet another connotation, associated with the term agitation. The two terms were first used by the Russian theorist of Marxism Georgy Plekhanov and later elaborated upon by Vladimir Ilich Lenin in a pamphlet What Is to Be Done? (1902), in which he defined “propaganda” as the reasoned use of historical and scientific arguments to indoctrinate the educated and enlightened (the attentive and informed publics, in the language of today’s social sciences); he defined “agitation” as the use of slogans, parables, and half-truths to exploit the grievances of the uneducated and the unreasonable. Since he regarded both strategies as absolutely essential to political victory, he combined them in the term agitprop. Every unit of historical communist parties had an agitprop section, and to the communist the use of propaganda in Lenin’s sense was commendable and honest. Thus, a standard Soviet manual for teachers of social sciences was entitled Propagandistu politekonomii (For the Propagandist of Political Economy), and a pocket-sized booklet issued weekly to suggest timely slogans and brief arguments to be used in speeches and conversations among the masses was called Bloknot agitatora (The Agitator’s Notebook).

Related to the general sense of propaganda is the concept of “propaganda of the deed.” This denotes taking nonsymbolic action (such as economic or coercive action), not for its direct effects but for its possible propagandistic effects. Examples of propaganda of the deed would include staging an atomic “test” or the public torture of a criminal for its presumable deterrent effect on others, or giving foreign “economic aid” primarily to influence the recipient’s opinions or actions and without much intention of building up the recipient’s economy.

Distinctions are sometimes made between overt propaganda, in which the propagandists and perhaps their backers are made known to the reactors, and covert propaganda, in which the sources are secret or disguised. Covert propaganda might include such things as political advertisements that are unsigned or signed with false names, clandestine radio stations using false names, and statements by editors, politicians, or others who have been secretly bribed by governments, political backers, or business firms. Sophisticated diplomatic negotiation, legal argument, collective bargaining, commercial advertising, and political campaigns are of course quite likely to include considerable amounts of both overt and covert propaganda, accompanied by propaganda of the deed.

Another term related to propaganda is psychological warfare (sometimes abbreviated to psychwar), which is the prewar or wartime use of propaganda directed primarily at confusing or demoralizing enemy populations or troops, putting them off guard in the face of coming attacks, or inducing them to surrender. The related concept of political warfare encompasses the use of propaganda, among many other techniques, during peacetime to intensify social and political divisions and to sow confusion within the societies of adversary states.

Still another related concept is that of brainwashing. The term usually means intensive political indoctrination. It may involve long political lectures or discussions, long compulsory reading assignments, and so forth, sometimes in conjunction with efforts to reduce the reactor’s resistance by exhausting him either physically through torture, overwork, or denial of sleep or psychologically through solitary confinement, threats, emotionally disturbing confrontations with interrogators or defected comrades, humiliation in front of fellow citizens, and the like. The term brainwashing was widely used in sensational journalism to refer to such activities (and to many other activities) as they were allegedly conducted by Maoists in China and elsewhere.

New from Britannica

The first-ever webcam was set up to monitor a pot of coffee so scientists wouldn’t have to go check if it was empty.

See All Good Facts

Another related word, advertising, has mainly commercial connotations, though it need not be restricted to this; political candidates, party programs, and positions on political issues may be “packaged” and “marketed” by advertising firms. The words promotion and public relations have wider, vaguer connotations and are often used to avoid the implications of “advertising” or “propaganda.” “Publicity” and “publicism” often imply merely making a subject known to a public, without educational, propagandistic, or commercial intent.

Which of the following best explains a political economic weakness or limitation of Rostow's stages of economic growth?

Which of the following best explains a political-economic weakness or limitation of Rostow's stages of economic growth? Rostow made the inaccurate assumption that all countries want modernization as defined in the model and would pass through the outlined stages in order.

Which of the following explains a significant obstacle to sustainable development and more developed countries?

Which of the following explains a significant obstacle to sustainable development in more developed countries? The reliance on fossil energy sources for electric generation and vehicle fuel has depleted resources globally and contributed to atmospheric pollution in cities.

Which of the following explains a limitation of a three tiered structure of Wallerstein's world systems theory?

Q. Which explains a limitation of the three-tiered structure of Wallerstein's world systems theory? The model does not provide for countries outside of the core to accomplish any of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

Which statement explains one way in which the transformation of India's economy contradicts Wallerstein's world system theory?

Which statement explains one way in which the transformation of India's economy contradicts Wallerstein's world system theory? Using a development strategy to avoid economic dependency, India has been able to develop its own industries and participate fully in the global economy. -Correct.