Defining the enemy: Propaganda in a civil war

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Defining the enemy: Propaganda in a civil war
Abstract
Propaganda in the first half of the 20th century is usually associated with the atrocity stories from World War I and the anti-Semitic propaganda of the Nazi regime and World War II. This chapter provides a brief overview of the history of propaganda and propaganda theory before turning its attention to a theory of propaganda in civil war. It argues that what makes propaganda in a civil war unique is that it is a combination of both political and war propaganda. Current research on propaganda theory emphasizes that propaganda is in service of an ideology and focuses on propaganda as disseminating information that tries to avoid reason and veracity. The chapter argues that propagandists in a civil war setting are presenting the ‘truth’ as they understand it. Informed by Carl Schmitt’s “friend/enemy” distinction in his Concept of the Political, the author argues that each side argued and was convinced that they represented the values and interests of the nation and its people, and that because the stakes of the conflict were so high that all actions could be justified.
Book Title
Violence and Propaganda in European Civil Wars
Date
2025
Publisher
Routledge
ISBN
978-1-003-30636-8
Citation Key
paddockDefiningEnemyPropaganda2025
Short Title
Defining the enemy
Extra
Num Pages: 11
Citation
Paddock, T. (2025). Defining the enemy: Propaganda in a civil war. In Violence and Propaganda in European Civil Wars. Routledge.