Pre-war
1914
Outbreak of the war
1915
1916
1917
1918
End of the war
Post-war

The battle for hearts and minds.

The professionalization of psychological mobilization in the First World War

The First World War saw the creation for the first time of dedicated institutions of propaganda intended to generate a perception of the war that was as uniform as possible. Britain and the United States of America took a pioneering role in the development of psychological warfare. The Central Powers at first underestimated the opportunities offered by propaganda and only started to organize propaganda measures centrally as the war progressed.

Compared to other countries, attempts at propaganda in Austria-Hungary at the beginning of the war were defensive in nature. In the initial years of the war there was no central propaganda office; in fact, strict censorship prevailed. Measures to mobilize public opinion were primarily undertaken by private associations with state support which produced posters, postcards and flyers exhorting the population to engage in charitable activities for the war effort. On the official side, there was the Kriegspressequartier (KPQ), which was subordinate to the Field Army Command and sought to influence the national and international press as well as the mood among the populace. It was not until March 1917 that the KPQ under the leadership of Colonel Wilhelm Eisner-Buba became the central institution tasked with shaping public opinion. Eisner-Buba expanded the KPQ, adding a group responsible for the arts together with a group for photography and film, institutionalizing public relations work on the British model. The remit of the KPQ included censorship, surveillance and the exertion of influence on the national and international press together with the production of pictorial images, the countering of hostile propaganda and the implementation of propaganda activities at home and abroad.

In Germany the Foreign Ministry and the Supreme Army Command were engaged in a dispute over competence for press censorship and public relations work. In the autumn of 1915 a more offensive approach was adopted towards news propaganda in an attempt to influence public opinion, but it was not until the spring of 1917 that the War Press Office was expanded to form a comprehensive propaganda department. Officers, writers, journalists, cartoonists and photographers worked to communicate the war in keeping with propaganda guidelines. The War Press Office supervised war reporting, coordinated the publication of army newspapers and published pamphlets, posters and flyers. However, in Germany the news monopoly was not absolute, as newspapers from neutral foreign countries were permitted.

In Britain the War Propaganda Bureau was founded on the initiative of the War Ministry in order to direct war propaganda as efficiently as possible. Also known as Wellington House after the building in which it was housed, this central office for censorship and propaganda was run by Charles Masterman, under whose direction in the first years of the war alone around 2.5 million books, proclamations and pamphlets in seventeen languages were distributed nationally and sent to neutral countries abroad. In 1917 Wellington House together with all the other British propaganda offices were subsumed by the Department of Information, which in turn eventually became a ministry in its own right in 1918.

In the USA the journalist Georg Creel headed the Committee on Public Information (CPI), which produced some 20,000 news items every week. The aim of the CPI was to steer the shaping of public opinion in the interests of politics and to mobilize the population for the country’s participation in the World War. Oriented on the model of British atrocity propaganda, which sought to mobilize public opinion against Germany, the Committee was directly subordinate to the president.

Translation: Sophie Kidd

Bibliografie 

Cornwall, Mark: The Undermining of Austria-Hungary. The Battle for Hearts and Minds, Basingstoke 2000

Jeismann, Michael: Propaganda, in: Hirschfeld, Gerhard/Krumeich, Gerd/Renz, Irene (Hrsg.), Enzyklopädie Erster Weltkrieg, Paderborn/München/Wien 2009, 198-209

Mayer, Klaus: Die Organisation des Kriegspressequartiers beim k.u.k. AOK im Ersten Weltkrieg 1914-1918, Unveröffentlichte Dissertation, Universität Wien, Wien 1963

Mruck, Tanja: Propaganda und Öffentlichkeit im Ersten Weltkrieg, Aachen 2004

Sanders, M.L./Taylor, Philip M.: Britische Propaganda im Ersten Weltkrieg 1914-1918, Berlin 1990

Schmidt, Anne: Belehrung – Propaganda – Vertrauensarbeit. Zum Wandel amtlicher Öffentlichkeitsarbeit in Deutschland 1914-1918, Essen 2006

Tomenendal, Kerstin: Das Türkenbild in Österreich-Ungarn während des Ersten Weltkrieges im Spiegel der Kriegspostkarten, Klagenfurt/Wien/Ljubljana 2008

 

 

Contents related to this chapter

Aspects

  • Aspect

    Guiding the masses

    Guiding the mood of the masses was an important aspect of warfare during the First World War. Considerable information and communication work was carried out to persuade the population of the “true facts”. All areas of life were influenced by propaganda in a way that had not been seen hitherto: reports in the newspapers, posters on the walls, even teaching material in schools now communicated controlled information. What methods and media were used? How did the various warring nations attempt to influence public opinion? What was communicated and how effective was the propaganda?

Persons, Objects & Events

  • Object

    Monitoring & control

    Everyday life in the Habsburg Monarchy was characterised by propaganda, monitoring and control, as can be seen by the many blank spaces in the daily newspapers and deletions in private correspondence and telegrams. At the same time an attempt was made in texts and audio-visual media to whip up general enthusiasm for the war. Not even the youngest inhabitants of the empire remained untouched, and the influence of the state was also felt in the schools of the Monarchy.