During the early 1930’s there was a group that went by the name of the Nazi’s. These people had beliefs that their way of life was the best way of living. The Nazi’s had a special agenda, and that was to influence their culture, beliefs, and religion upon others. The Nazi’s wanted to be the ideal ethnic group. They deemed power, respect, and control over human beings. As I reflect upon this image of a knife pierced through the holy bible, I feel that the picture portray that the Nazi’s are saying the words from the Holy Bible are their enemy and they do not stand for what the Holy Bible is saying. This image displays the ethos as biased, but clearly identifies the pathos and logos and succeeds in the message it is trying to relate to the people who beliefs differ from what they believe in. Based upon the image, the target audience was intended for people whose beliefs differ from the Nazis. As you view the image, you become very aware that it is the Nazi’s because in the picture it shows a swastika symbol on a person’s sleeve. That symbol itself radically stands for the Nazi’s group. It then goes to show that the person with the swastika symbol on its sleeve is piercing a knife through the bible. A knife symbolizes to cut or destroy, which directly …show more content…
I do feel that logos in the image was not all that great being the image was not factual or logical and it tend to be one-sided. I feel that the image showed a lot of emotion especially because I’m a Christian. I have been raised in and brought up in a home that idolized the holy bible and its meaning is very sacred. The disrespect that the Nazis had for others beliefs is very upsetting and selfish. The image personally was very spiteful to me, but regardless of my personal feelings, the creator illustrations were