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Discover LudwigThe phrase "propaganda pieces" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to pieces of information or media that are created and disseminated with the intention of influencing people's beliefs or actions towards a certain cause or opinion. Example: The government's use of propaganda pieces to sway public opinion on the war was highly criticized by many media outlets.
Exact(19)
They're propaganda pieces, but important for understanding history nonetheless, says Fowler.
In 1943 Dmytryk directed the propaganda pieces Hitler's Children, a surprise box-office hit, and Behind the Rising Sun.
He began in the 1970s by writing descriptions of his inventory and sending them out to customers — "little propaganda pieces," he called them.
"It was all the misfits and artsy characters," he recalled of the unit, where he learned to make models for "propaganda pieces for the big shots whenever they came around".
But in every other area the Imperial War Museum did me proud: I spent hours in a projection room there watching mute, unedited film of the Libyan campaign – this is the film taken by the official cameramen attached to each battalion which served as the basis for the Pathé Pictorial and Movietone propaganda pieces of the day.
Other N. C. chestnuts include a Norman Rockwell-ish rendering (circa 1923) of Lincoln giving his second inaugural address in 1865, and various World War II propaganda pieces, among them "Soldiers of the Soil" (1942), in which a farmer tills his land watched over by a clutch of Allied flags hovering among puffy clouds.
Similar(40)
One intelligence source described the video as a "polished propaganda piece", put together and composed from different frames.
A statement from Americans United for Life called the report "an abortion industry propaganda piece short on data and long on strained conclusions".
Krása staged the opera there fifty-five tites; it was also filmed, and scenes were included in a propaganda piece called "The Führer Gives the Jews a City".
Warner Brothers followed "Desperate Journey" with "Edge of Darkness" (1943), a more conventionally preachy propaganda piece that suffers from some heavy-handed direction by Lewis Milestone.
In its final version, it is a sprawling four-and-a-half-hour epic – part character study, part bombastic propaganda piece.
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