Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 280
Trim: 7½ x 9¼
978-0-7425-3562-6 • Hardback • September 2004 • $152.00 • (£117.00)
978-0-7425-3563-3 • Paperback • September 2004 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
978-1-4616-4684-6 • eBook • September 2004 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Yahya R. Kamalipour is professor in the Department of Communication and Creative Arts, Purdue University Calumet. For more information about Dr. Kamaplipour, please visit http://www.kamalipour.com/ Nancy Snow, a former USIA and State Department official, is assistant professor in the College of Communications at California State University, Fullerton, and adjunct professor in the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Southern California. She also serves as senior research fellow in the USC Center on Public Diplomacy. For more information about Dr. Snow, please visit http://www.nancysnow.com.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 1 Information Dominance: The Philosophy of Total Propaganda Control?
Chapter 4 2 From Bombs and Bullets to Hearts and Minds: U.S. Public Diplomacy in an Age of Propaganda
Chapter 5 3 Selling the Iraq War: The Media Management Strategies We Never Saw
Chapter 6 4 Measuring Success: Profit and Propaganda
Chapter 7 5 Spinning War and Blotting Out Memory
Chapter 8 6 Weapons of Mass Distraction: World Security and Personal Politics
Chapter 9 7 Spectacle and Media Propaganda in the War on Iraq: A Critique of U.S. Broadcasting Networks
Chapter 10 8 War as Promotional "Photo-op": The New York Times's Visual Coverage of the U.S. Invasion of Iraq
Chapter 11 9 Murdoch's War—A Transnational Perspective
Chapter 12 10 Glossy: American Hegemony and the Culture of Death
Chapter 13 11 War, Propaganda, and Islam in Muslim and Western Sources
Chapter 14 12 Enemy Image: A Case Study in Creating a Mata Hari
Chapter 15 13 Anatomy of a Bonding: An Embedded Reporter's Account of the Bonding Process with the Soldiers
Chapter 16 14 The War on Iraq: A Reporter's Observations
Chapter 17 15 America: The Fourth Reich
Chapter 18 16 War on Iraq and Media Coverage: A Middle Eastern Perspective
Chapter 19 17 Iranians and Media Coverage of the War in Iraq: Rhetoric, Propaganda, and Contradiction
Chapter 20 18 South Africa and Iraq: The Battle for Media Reality
Chapter 21 19 The Chinese Watching the Iraqi War with Shock and Awe—As a Spectacular Game
Chapter 22 20 The Self-Absorbed Bully: A Brazilian View of the United States at War
Chapter 23 21 Threat or Ally? U.S.-Latin American Relations and the Middle East Conflict
Chapter 24 22 From Propaganda to Public Diplomacy in the Information Age
Chapter 25 23 Can We Make Them Love Us? Public Diplomacy After 9/11
Chapter 26 24 War, Media, and Propaganda: An Epilogue
Chapter 27 Suggested Readings
Taken together, the 24 essays in this collection demonstrate once again the truth of the cliché that truth is the first casualty of war. Several contributors discuss, and are disturbed by, the unprecedented extent of deliberate, detailed, and systematic lying (all of which has been documented) by the Bush administration regarding the instigation and conduct of the war on Iraq. Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews
There has been a reflex throughout the history of modern news: When the country goes to war, so do the major news organizations. They consider it 'patriotic.' But it is dubious patriotism that abandons citizens in unnecessary ignorance of critical information. . . . The before-and-after picture of United States officialdom presents a stark lesson of the tragedies of war and propaganda repeated in the major media.
— Ben H. Bagdikian, from the foreword