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"propagandism" Definitions
  1. the action, practice, or art of propagating doctrines or of spreading or employing propaganda

10 Sentences With "propagandism"

How to use propagandism in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "propagandism" and check conjugation/comparative form for "propagandism". Mastering all the usages of "propagandism" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Reviews of the movie, the third in a trilogy of government-backed films about Chinese history, were better than expected, given the film's propagandism.
Yes, he relishes a good bout with reporters, but the militant propagandism he channels in the briefing room feels like a performance for the audience-of-one watching him almost daily from the Oval Office.
There was the gross hypocrisy of "the time for trivial fights is behind us," the campy propagandism of creating a Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement office, the prepared remarks in all caps calling to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN.
Although it was criticized for poor animation, propagandism and its depiction of Marx, it has sparked a discussion on Marxism and labor rights in China.
"The Dog Lovers Hour" comes on again, and Wover, incensed by the events of the day, further fueled by Canine's propagandism, gets off the couch and limps to the studio (as he has one hind leg in a cast). Elmer arrives back in the living room just in time to witness Wover attacking Canine on television, as the short ends.
The schools were derisively called "Raikes' Ragged School". Criticisms raised included that it would weaken home-based religious education, that it might be a desecration of the Sabbath, and that Christians should not be employed on the Sabbath. Some leading ecclesiastics—among them Bishop Samuel Horsley—opposed them on the grounds that they might become subservient to purposes of political propagandism. "Sabbatarian disputes" in the 1790s led many Sunday schools to cease their teaching of writing.
In 1981, Alex Callinicos of the British Socialist Workers Party (SWP) took issue with the party's argument that "such issues as racism and Ireland form [...] a vital component of revolutionary propaganda". Callinicos claimed instead that "if most of the workers involved have reactionary views on questions such as race, the position of women, and so on", then that was less important than that they were fighting over pay and conditions. Callinicos also called into question the party's stress on "the connection between reformism and nationalism", saying they were "paleo- marxists".'Politics or Abstract Propagandism', International Socialism no.11, 1981, pp.
In 1852 he took up his residence at Brantwood, which afterward he sold to John Ruskin, and from there issued The English Republic, first in the form of weekly tracts and afterward as a monthly magazine "a useful exponent of republican principles, a faithful record ef republican progress throughout the world; an organ of propagandism and a medium of communication for the active republicans in England." Most of the paper, which never paid its way and was abandoned in 1855, was written by himself. In 1852 he also printed for private circulation an anonymous volume of poems entitled The Plaint of Freedom. After the failure of his paper he returned to his proper work of wood-engraving.
Boys standing in front of a Stürmerkasten, the public stands in cities featuring Der Stürmer during the Nazi era. From the late 1920s, Julius Streicher's vulgar style of propagandism increasingly became a cause of embarrassment for the Nazi party. In 1936, the sale of Der Stürmer was restricted in Berlin during the Olympic Games in an attempt to preserve the Nazi regime's international reputation and prestige. Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels tried to completely ban the newspaper in 1938, Hermann Göring forbade Der Stürmer in all of his departments, and Baldur von Schirach prohibited Hitler Youth members from reading it in Hitler Youth- sponsored hostels and other education facilities by a "Reichsbefehl" ("Reich command").
Professionally, Hayakawa was a linguist, psychologist, semanticist, teacher, and writer. He served as an instructor at the University of Wisconsin from 1936 to 1939 and at the Armour Institute of Technology (Illinois Institute of Technology as of 1940) from 1939 to 1948. His first book on semantics, Language in Thought and Action, expanded its forerunner (and Book-of-the-Month Club selection) Language in Action, written from 1938-1941. With five editions from 1949-1991, Language in Thought and Action helped to popularize Alfred Korzybski's general semantics and semantics in general, while semantics or theory of meaning was overwhelmed by mysticism, propagandism and even scientism. In the preface, Hayakawa cautioned: In addition to such motivation, he acknowledged his debt as follows: Hayakawa lectured at the University of Chicago from 1950 to 1955.

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