Examines American journalists' and media companies' roles in Hitler's Germany, reigniting the debate on the relationship between political power and the media.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Nazi Germany as Part of the Modern Global Media System
1. Berlin 1932-37: The Most Exciting News Center in the World
2. Media Events and Scoops during the Expansion of the Third Reich in 1938-41 and the Triumph of Radio in Politics
3. Karl Henry von Wiegand, the Hearst Press, and National Socialism
4. Secret Photos: Covert Cooperation between AP and Nazi Germany, 1942-45
5. "Why didn't the press shout?": American Foreign Correspondents and the Holocaust
Summary: The Permanent Presence of the Foreign Press in Nazi Germany
Bibliography
Index
Norman Domeier, translated by Jessica Spengler