Contents

  1. Preface
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. General Introduction
  4. PART 1
  5. Studies of Totalitarianism, Propaganda, and the Masses (1936–1940)
  6. 1. Exposé. Mass and Propaganda. An Inquiry Into Fascist Propaganda
  7. 2. Totalitarian Propaganda
  8. 3. Abridged Restricted Schema
  9. 4. Schemata
  10. 5. Disposition
  11. PART 2
  12. The Caligari Complex (1943–1947)
  13. 6. The Conquest of Europe on the Screen: The Nazi Newsreel, 1939–40
  14. 7. The Hitler Image
  15. 8. Below the Surface: Project of a Test Film
  16. PART 3
  17. Postwar Publics (1948–1950)
  18. 9. Re-education Program for the Reich
  19. 10. How and Why the Public Responds to the Propagandist
  20. 11. Popular Advertisements
  21. 12. A Duck Crosses Main Street
  22. 13. National Types as Hollywood Presents Them
  23. 14. Deluge of Pictures
  24. PART 4
  25. Cold War Tensions (1952–1958)
  26. 15. Appeals to the Near and Middle East: Implications of the Communications Studies Along the Soviet Periphery
  27. 16. Attitudes Toward Various Communist Types in Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia
  28. 17. Proposal for a Research Project Designed to Promote the Use of Qualitative Analysis in the Social Sciences
  29. 18. The Challenge of Qualitative Content Analysis
  30. 19. On the Relation of Analysis to the Situational Factors in Case Studies
  31. 20. The Social Research Center on the Campus: Its Significance for the Social Sciences and Its Relations to the University and Society at Large
  1. Appendix 1: T. W. Adorno, “Report on the Work ‘Totalitarian Propaganda in Germany and Italy’ by Siegfried Kracauer, pp. 1–106”
  2. Appendix 2: John Abromeit, “Siegfried Kracauer and the Early Frankfurt School’s Analysis of Fascism as Right-Wing Populism”
  3. Bibliography
  4. Sources
  5. Index