

The Nazis routinely shared altered photos in their official publication, the Illustrierter Beobachter.

By Dr. Daniel H. Magilow
Lindsay Young Professor of German
University of Tennessee
Introduction
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump claimed in August 2024 that aย photograph of a large crowdย of supporters welcoming Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris to Detroit on Aug. 7 was doctored. Trump falsely wrote on Truth Social that the crowd did not exist becauseย โshe โA.I.โdโ it.โ
Multiple independent news sources,ย including Reutersย andย the BBC, confirmed that the photograph was not created by artificial intelligence. Theย large crowdsย at other Harris rallies also suggested that this turnout was not an anomaly. But minuscule details such as theย apparent lack of reflectionsย on the plane made some conspiracy theorists skeptical.
Trump himself came under fire after fake, AI-generated images made by his supporters of him amid crowds ofย smiling Black supportersย circulated. But even if Trump seemsย willing to share fake images, he does not have a monopoly on the practice.
After a bullet grazed Trumpโs ear on July 13, for instance, some people โ including those who identified as anti-MAGA activists โ sharedย social media postsย andย memesย asserting the false idea that theย assassination attempt was staged.
These kinds of accusations โ that fake-looking images are real, that real-looking ones are fake โ have been a common feature in politics, particularly among extremists, especially since the early 20th century.
Thatโs when it first became technically possible to routinely print photographs in newspapers and magazines. During this era, a new form of media blossomed, as magazines began using photographs, rather than just drawings, for illustration purposes. These magazines were particularly popular during the Weimar Republic, a government in power in Germany from 1919 through 1933, before the rise of the National Socialist German Workersโ Party, most often known as the Nazi party.
During the 1920s, Germanyย experienced an unstable economy,ย parliamentary paralysisย and an increasingly polarized society.
During this economically and politically tumultuous time in Germany, photo manipulation in popular news publications โ particularly one run by the Nazis โ was rampant.
The Rise of the Nazis’ Publication

I am a scholar of Germany, andย as part of my researchย on Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, I have been researching an idiosyncratic Nazi propaganda magazine called theย Illustrated Observerย โ or, in German, the Illustrierter Beobachter.
The Nazis, who formed as a political party in 1920, started publishing this magazine in 1926. The magazine, published through 1945, provides valuable historical context for understanding todayโs political mudslinging about fake and doctored photos. It also shows how, left unchecked, publishing fake information could potentially contribute to dire political consequences, such as a rise in fascism.
As the Illustrated Observerโs name suggests, it belonged to a genre of publications that Germans call Illustrierten, literally translating to โillustratedsโ in English.
These magazines included serious news stories and photojournalism, but also short fictional stories, jokes, cartoons and crossword puzzles. And because of advances in printing technologies, they also included lots of photographs.
Theseย glossy, stylishly illustrated tabloidsย were so popular in Germany that the most popular publication, theย Berliner Illustrirte Zeitungย โ or Berlin Illustrated Newspaper โ had a circulation of 1,844,130 copies each week by 1929.
The actual readership numbers surpassed this figure, as multiple people in homes, hotels and cafรฉs in Germany would share copies of the newspaper.
‘Who Lies?’
In July 1926, the Illustrated Observer published a spread that included eight large photographs of a Nazi rally held in the town of Weimar. It included one photo that was taken with a wide-angle camera lens that exaggerates the crowdโs size.
Alongside this camera trick, the Nazis also used misleading captions and photo cropping to skew how people would likely interpret this and other photographs.
The Nazis were still a small political party in 1926, but they were steadily gaining power, and this sort of photographic trickery helped fuel their rise.
The caption for the photo that shows a crowd of people at the Nazi rally hatefully shouts: โWho lies? Photography or the Jewish newspapers?โ
With this question, the Illustrated Observer aimed to discredit centrist newspapers, which accurately reported that the rally was a noisy and violent affair attended by hooligans, whom one journalist mocked as โHitler-people.โ

A few months later, the Illustrated Observerโs Christmas 1926 issue included a story headlined โThe Jews and their servants.โ A tightly cropped photo showed U.S. President Calvin Coolidge surrounded by about a dozen rabbis, who were dressed conservatively and had top hats and thick beards, traditional for Orthodox Jewish men.
But this was not the full story. The photograph was cropped, and the original image showed a muchย larger group portraitย of more than 100 people who attended a religious Zionist meeting at the White House. Through cropping and misleading headlines, the Illustrated Observer falsely tried to show that a small, conspiratorial group of Jews controlled the American president.
A Flashback to the 1920s
These kinds of photo manipulations were common during the final years of the Weimar Republic, Germanyโs first but ultimately failed experiment with democracy that left the doors of power open to the Nazi takeover in January 1933.
The Nazis effectively used a visually striking mix of incendiary words and images in their magazine to constantly sow the seeds of doubt among readers. It was hard to know which photographs were real and which were fakes โ and, thus, who was telling Germans the truth and who was not. This practice eroded confidence in the news, fueled further conspiracy theories and made it hard to know which political party to trust.
These conflicts from a century ago will sound familiar to people following the 2024 U.S. presidential election.
Now, there are also claims of doctoring images, angry rebuttals, accusations of media bias and an intense, conspiratorial fixation on details that supposedly expose certain images as fakes.
To some, the knowledge that the current political trend of photo doctoring is not new may make it easier to dismiss this as a fact of life in politics. But to others, the ominous historical consequences of unchecked photo manipulation might be too significant to ignore.
Originally published by The Conversation, 09.12.2024, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.


