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War, Media, and Propaganda
A Global Perspective- Editors:
- |
- Publisher:
- 2004
Summary
This timely book presents a multifaceted look at war, media, and propaganda from international perspectives. Focusing on the media's role in global conflicts, prominent authors, journalists, scholars, and researchers provide an insightful overview of the impact of globalization on media practices. They examine the processes behind media coverage of war, sophisticated propaganda techniques, the dynamics of public opinion, and the effects on human affairs and communication. As the book moves through theoretical discussions to regional and national views, it explores cultural-political implications for the United States and other countries around the world, concluding with recommendations and solutions to key problems of media globalization.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2004
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-7425-3562-6
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4616-4684-6
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 261
- Product type
- Edited Book
Table of contents
ChapterPages
- Contents No access
- Foreword No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Introduction: Yahya R. Kamalipour No access Pages 1 - 6
- 1 Information Dominance: The Philosophy of Total Propaganda Control? David Miller No access Pages 7 - 16
- 2 From Bombs and Bullets to Hearts and Minds: U.S. Public Diplomacy in an Age of Propaganda Nancy Snow No access Pages 17 - 24
- 3 Selling the Iraq War: The Media Management Strategies We Never Saw Danny Schechter No access Pages 25 - 32
- 4 Measuring Success: Profit and Propaganda David J. Collison No access Pages 33 - 46
- 5 Spinning War and Blotting Out Memory Norman Solomon No access Pages 47 - 58
- 6 Weapons of Mass Distraction: World Security and Personal Politics Naren Chitty No access Pages 59 - 68
- 7 Spectacle and Media Propaganda in the War on Iraq: A Critique of U.S. Broadcasting Networks Douglas Kellner No access Pages 69 - 78
- 8 War as Promotional "Photo Op": The New York Times's Visual Coverage of the U.S. Invasion of Iraq Lee Artz No access Pages 79 - 92
- 9 Murdoch's War—A Transnational Perspective Daya Kishan Thussu No access Pages 93 - 100
- 10 Glossy: American Hegemony and the Culture of Death Leila Conners Petersen No access Pages 101 - 106
- 11 War, Propaganda, and Islam in Muslim and Western Sources Karim H. Karim No access Pages 107 - 116
- 12 Enemy Image: A Case Study in Creating a Mata Hari Asra Q. Nomani No access Pages 117 - 124
- 13 Anatomy of a Bonding: An Embedded Reporter's Account of the Bonding Process with the Soldiers Ronald Paul Larson No access Pages 125 - 130
- 14 The War on Iraq: A Reporter's Observations Dana Hull No access Pages 131 - 138
- 15 America: The Fourth Reich Barrie Zwicker No access Pages 139 - 146
- 16 War on Iraq and Media Coverage: A Middle Eastern Perspective Mahboub E. Hashem No access Pages 147 - 170
- 17 Iranians and Media Coverage of the War in Iraq: Rhetoric, Propaganda, and Contradiction Naiim Badii No access Pages 171 - 178
- 18 South Africa and Iraq: The Battle for Media Reality Arnold de Beer, Herman Wasserman, and Nicolene Botha No access Pages 179 - 188
- 19 The Chinese Watching the Iraqi War with Shock and Awe—As a Spectacular Game Zhou He No access Pages 189 - 198
- 20 The Self-Absorbed Bully: A Brazilian View of the United States at War Antonio La Pastina No access Pages 199 - 206
- 21 Threat or Ally? U.S.–Latin American Relations and the Middle East Conflict Kathleen A. Tobin No access Pages 207 - 218
- 22 From Propaganda to Public Diplomacy in the Information Age R. S. Zaharna No access Pages 219 - 226
- 23 Can We Make Them Love Us? Public Diplomacy after 9/11 Geoffrey Cowan No access Pages 227 - 236
- 24 War, Media, and Propaganda: An Epilogue Majid Tehranian No access Pages 237 - 242
- Suggested Readings No access Pages 243 - 246
- Index No access Pages 247 - 254
- About the Contributors No access Pages 255 - 261





