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- Japan's radio war on Australia, 1941-1945 by Meo, Lucy D.;
Bibliography: pages 289-295."This fascinating survey of Japanese propaganda beamed to Australia during World War II is based on the records of the Listening Post of the war-time Australian Department of Information, and on material translated from Japanese sources"--Inside book jacket.Part I Japan's Propaganda Machine : 1. Policy-making in the 'National Defence State Structure' -- 2. The Cabinet Board of Information -- 3. The broadcasting stations -- Part II : The techniques of persuasion 4. Trends in Japanese propaganda -- 5. Japan appeals to Australia-I -- 6. Japan appeals to Australia-II -- 7. Japan's Australian audience -- Part III : Behind the propaganda 8. Japan's 'New Order' -- 9. Australia's proper place -- Appendices.
- Subjects: World War, 1939-1945; Radio in propaganda.; Propaganda, Japanese.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- German radio propaganda; report on home broadcasts during the war / by Kris, Ernst,1900-1957.(CARDINAL)180437; Speier, Hans.(CARDINAL)144882;
Bibliographical references included in "Acknowledgments" (pages ix-x)
- Subjects: World War, 1939-1945; Propaganda, German.; Radio in propaganda.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- Propaganda swing [videorecording] Dr. Goebbels' jazz orchestra / by Belles, Stephen.; Brocksieper, Freddie.; Eisermann, David.; Steinbiss, Florian.; Charlie & His Orchestra.; International Historic Films, Inc.; Südwestfunk (Baden-Baden, Germany);
Director of photography, Michael Neubauer ; editor, Hildegard Schröder ; music, Heiner Reiff.Musicians, Branko Pejakovic, Armin Rusch, Charlie and HIs Orchestra ; narrator, Stephen Belles.Joseph Goebbels and his Propaganda Ministry created a "jazz orchestra that would serve up Nazi propaganda backed by the latest swing music. The result was 'Charlie and his Orchestra,' made up of Europe's finest jazz players whose short-wave broadcasts to English and American audiences soon gained a following ...In this film, surviving band members recall their musical collaboration with the Nazi regime with ambivalence and insight, shedding new light onto the contradictory workings of Goebbels' propaganda machine"--Container label.Not rated.DVD-5, NTSC region 0.
- Subjects: Documentary films.; Nazi propaganda.; Popular music; Radio in propaganda;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Propaganda by short wave / by Childs, Harwood L.(Harwood Lawrence),1898-1972.(CARDINAL)129705; Whitton, John Boardman,1892-1977.(CARDINAL)173583;
Radio in international politics, by J. B. Whitton and J. H. Herz.--The theory and strategy of Nazi short-wave propaganda, by P. E. Jacob.--Britain speaks, by Daniel Katz.--The structure of Rome short-wave broadcasts to North America, by Bruno Foa.--Paris-mondial, by Arturo Mathieu.--Atrocity propaganda, by P. E. Jacob.--Techniques of persuasion, by Edrita Fried.--America's short-wave audience, by H. L. Childs.
- Subjects: World War, 1939-1945; Radio in propaganda.; Old State Library Collection.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- Radio war guide. by United States.Office of Facts and Figures.(CARDINAL)299672; United States.Office of War Information.(CARDINAL)133496;
Description based on: No. 1 (Apr. 27, 1942); title from cover.Latest issue consulted: No. 2 (July 1, 1942).
- Subjects: Radio broadcasting; Radio in propaganda; World War, 1939-1945;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- What did you do in the war, auntie? / by Hickman, Tom.(CARDINAL)635557;
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- Subjects: British Broadcasting Corporation.; World War, 1939-1945; Propaganda, British; Radio in propaganda;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- This is war! A collection of plays about America on the march, by Norman Corwin [and others] ... with an introduction by H.L. McClinton. by Corwin, Norman,1910-2011.(CARDINAL)125003;
"This is War!" was a bellwether. As the first series of radio programs-- and the only one-- to be carried by all four nationwide networks, it was a unique experiment in American broadcasting. And it pioneered in wartime propaganda, during the first frantic months of the national emergency, in that it was the first series to attempt to present and elucidate national policies to the country, and at the same time to arouse and unify the people emotionally. The series was broadcast each Saturday night for 13 weeks, beginning February 14, 1942, over approximately 600 radio stations in America."--Introduction.
- Subjects: Drama.; Radio plays, American.; World War, 1939-1945; American drama; Propaganda, American.; World War, 1939-1945; Radio in propaganda.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- The radio signal [microform] : the true story of a harrowing escape and a love that arose from a world war / by Radandt, Friedhelm.(CARDINAL)552701;
Part 1: Neustettin: January 30, 1945 ; Barwalde: January 30, 1945 ; Pomerania: 1934-1937 ; Wlochy, near Warsaw: 1934-1937 ; Neustettin: 1938-1939 ; Wlochy: 1939 ; Neustettin: 1940-1941 ; Poland: 1940-1941 ; Neustettin: 1942-1943 ; Warsaw: 1942-1943 ; Neustettin: 1943-1944 ; Porta Westfalica: 1944 ; Pomerania: 1944 ; Kalisz: December 1944 -- Part 2: Kalisz: January 1945 ; Neustettin: January 1945 ; Crossing into Germany: January 1945 ; Kolberg: February 1945 ; Hamburg: February 1945 ; Rittergut Dolgen: February-March 1945 ; Hamburg: March 1945 ; Kolberg: March 1945 ; Hamburg: April-May 1945 ; Nordhorm: Spring 1945 ; Alt-Karbe: Spring 1945 ; Pavia: May 1945 -- Part 3: Schlagsdorf: 1945 ; Hamburg: 1948 ; Hamburg: 1955 ; Epilogue: Hamburg and Beyond: 1955-1960 -- Discussion questions.Growing up in bucolic Eastern Pomerania during the early years of World War II, young Friedhelm Radandt listened with his family on the Volksempfanger (people's radio) to the many victory news bulletins. At the same time, Elizabeth Job and her family lived in urbane Warsaw as loyal citizens of Poland who cherished their ethnic German heritage. Now, as the war intensifies, the Radandts continue to hold worship meetings in their home and defy the pressure of local party leaders to send their sons to the notorious school for future Nazi leaders. Meanwhile, across the border, Elizabeth's family must cope with the death sentence from the Polish resistance movement for her father, Ludwig, the researcher and developer of radio tubes. When both families are driven from their homes, each embark on harrowing, yet thrilling parallel escape routes across war-torn Germany. The Radio Signal captures the true story of two separate families who share a vibrant faith that imbues their actions with courage and trust. During the war, neither family knows of the other. Neither family knows that their paths will ultimately cross.
- Subjects: Encyclopedias.; Personal narratives.; World War, 1939-1945; Nazi propaganda; Radio in propaganda; World War, 1939-1945; World War, 1939-1945;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Max in the land of lies [audio-enabled device] / by Gidwitz, Adam,author.(CARDINAL)352648; Morton, Euan,narrator.; Playaway Digital Audio.(CARDINAL)565887; Playaway Products.;
Read by Euan Morton. Max Bretzfeld is back in Berlin as a British spy. His most dangerous mission is about to begin in the much-anticipated sequel to Adam Gidwitz's instant bestseller Max in the House of Spies. Max is on a mission. Well, two missions. One has been assigned by his British spymasters: Infiltrate the Funkhaus, the center of Nazi radio and propaganda. The other they have forbidden: Find his parents. Max Bretzfeld was willing to do anything to return to Germany, even become a British spy. Training complete and forged papers in hand, the radio wunderkinds missions have begun. But nothing is as he expected. His parents are missing. Nazi intelligence is watching him. And the lines between lies and truth are becoming more blurred every day.Grades 3-6.
- Subjects: Spy fiction.; Historical fiction.; Children's audiobooks.; Kindertransports (Rescue operations); Jewish refugees; Missing persons; Radio in propaganda; Spirits; World War, 1939-1945;
- Available copies: 0 / Total copies: 2
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- The only woman in the room : a memoir of Japan, human rights, and the arts / by Gordon, Beate,author.(CARDINAL)777743;
A vivid and very personal account of one woman's life in Europe, prewar Japan, and the United States. As the daughter of renowned Russian pianist Leo Sirota, Beate Gordon grew up in the cosmopolitan world of the concert tour, then settled in Japan in the 1930s. During World War II, while her parents remained in Japan under secret service surveillance, Gordon lived alone in the United States, monitoring Tokyo Radio in five languages for the government and later writing radio propaganda. She recounts her dramatic reunion with her parents in Tokyo, where she worked in General MacArthur's headquarters, and evokes the postwar suffering in defeated Japan. Her intimate description of helping draft the women's rights section of Japan's new constitution is an astonishing record of history in the making. On returning to the States in 1947, Mrs. Gordon became a cultural impresario, bringing artists, dancers, writers, and musicians from all over to the United States. Her adventures in search of performing artists in such remote and exotic places as Mongolia, Tibet, India, and Indonesia make for hilarious and sometimes hair-raising anecdotes.
- Subjects: Autobiographies.; Gordon, Beate.; Impresarios; Arts;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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