Propaganda, power and persuasion from World War I to Wikileaks
The book provides compelling evidence of how the study and practice of propaganda today is shaped by its history. As Philip Taylor has written, 'The challenge (of the modern information age) is to ensure that no single propaganda source gains monopoly over the information and images that shape...
Saved in:
| Format: | Book |
|---|---|
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
London
I.B. Tauris
2014
|
| Series: | International library of historical studies
90 |
| Subjects: | |
| Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Table of Contents:
- 'Opening Pandora's Box': propaganda, power and persuasion / David Welch
- Propaganda, memory and identity: the Battle of the Falkland Islands, December 1914 / Mark Connelly
- Images of the Hun: the portrayal of the German enemy in British propaganda in World War I / David Welch
- George Arliss: the superstar as propagandist. British propaganda in the interwar period / Jeffrey Richards
- 'War' versus 'cultural' propaganda: institutional and ideological tensions over the projection of Britain during the Second World War / James Chapman
- 'Today Germany, Tomorrow the World': Nazi propaganda and total war, 1943-45 / David Welch
- The tragedy of American Public Diplomacy, 1989-1999: the last decade of the United States Information Agency reconsidered / Nicholas J. Cull
- Radio free Asia and China's harmonious society / Gary D. Rawnsley
- NATO and information warfare / Edward M. Spiers
- Strategic communications and the combatant commander / Jeffrey B. Jones, Daniel T. Kuehl, Daniel Burgess, and Russell Roche
- Strategy, influence, strategic communication and British Military doctrine / Kate Utting
- Bridging the firewall? Information operations and US Military doctrine in the Battles of Fallujah / Stephen Badsey
- (Mis)communication wars: terrorism, counter-terrorism and the media / Cristina Archetti
- WikiLeaks and cybersecurity: new modes of propaganda / David Culbert
- 'Telling it like it is': contemporary war, propaganda, media and the state / Piers Robinson


