This volume concerns the origins, organisation and method of British, American and Soviet propaganda during the 1950s. Drawing upon a range of archival material which has only been accessible to researchers in the last few years, the authors discuss propaganda's international and domestic dimensions, and chart the development of a shared Cold War culture. They demonstrate how the structures of propaganda which were organised at this time endured, giving shape and meaning to the remaining years of the Cold War.
RICHARD ALDRICH Senior Lecturer in the Department of Politics, University of Nottingham
SUSAN CARRUTHERS Lecturer in the Department of International Politics, University of Wales, Aberystwyth
EDWARD HERMAN Professor Emeritus of Finance at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
W. SCOTT LUCAS Head of American and Canadian Studies at the University of Birmingham
Professor GUY OAKES Jack T. Kvernland Chair at Monmouth University
GRAHAM ROBERTS Lecturer in the Institute of Communication Studies, University of Leeds.
TONY SHAW Lecturer in Modern History at Hertfordshire University
HOWARD SMITH Senior Lecturer in the Institute of Communication Studies, University of Leeds, and is a former BBC current affairs producer
RICHARD STITES Professor of Russian History at Georgetown University
PHILIP M. TAYLOR Reader in International Communication and he Deputy Director of the Institute of Communication Studies, University of Leeds
Acknowledgements Notes on the Contributors Introduction; G.D.Rawnsley Beyond Diplomacy: Propaganda and the History of the Cold War; W.S.Lucas The Campaign of Truth: A Populist Propaganda; G.D.Rawnsley 'Not Just Washed But Dry-Cleaned: Korea and the Brainwashing Scare of the 1950s; S.Carruthers The Family Under Nuclear Attack: American Civil Defense Propaganda in the 1950s; G.Oakes Heaven and Hell: Soviet Propaganda Constructs the World; R.Stites A Cinema of Suspicion or a Suspicion of Cinema; G.Roberts British Feature Films and the Early Cold War; T.Shaw Have They Changed at All? The Portrayal of Germany in BBC Television Programmes, 1946-1955; H.Smith The BBC External Services and the Hungarian Uprising; G.D.Rawnsley The Struggle for the Mind of European Youth: The CIA and European Movement Propaganda, 1948-60; R.J.Aldrich Returning Guatemala to the Fold; E.Herman Through a Glass Darkly?: The Psychological Climate and Psychological Warfare of the Cold War; P.M.Taylor