Description: This book provides the first detailed analysis of how interactions between government policy and Fleet Street affected the political coverage of the Greek civil war, one of the first major confrontations of the Cold War. During this period the exponential growth of media influence was an immensely potent weapon of psychological warfare. Throughout the 1940s the press maintained its position as the most powerful medium and its influence remained unchallenged. The documentary record shows that a British media consensus was more fabricated than spontaneous, and the tools of media persuasion and manipulation were extremely important in building acceptance for British foreign policy. Gioula Koutsopanagou examines how this media consensus was influenced and molded by the British government and how Foreign Office channels were key to molding public attitudes to British foreign policy. These channels included system of briefings given by the News Department to the diplomatic correspondents, and the contacts between embassies and the British foreign correspondents. Gioula Koutsopanagou is founding director of the Media History Workshop (ETMIET) in the Research Centre for Modern Greece at Panteion University, Greece. She is adjunct academic staff of the Faculty of Humanities at Hellenic Open University. She is the co-editor of the Encyclopedia of the Greek Press. Her monograph on British Cultural and Information Publicity Policy in Greece, 1943-1950 will be published in 2019. Introduction.- Britain During the Prelude to the Cold War.- British Wartime and Post-War Mass Psychology: Turning the Tide.- The British Press in the Formative Early Cold War Years.- Wartime Censorship and the Early Construction of a Post-War 'Consensus': British Press Attitudes Towards Greece from January 1943 up to December 1944 Crisis.- Managing the Press Storm of December 1944.- Keeping British Press Reporting within the 'Correct' Bounds.- 'In Our View the Main Danger to Law and Order in Greece Comes from the Communists'.- Orchestrating Cold-War National and International Public 'Consensus': The British Press Coverage of the Greek Crisis. An Overview .- Conclusion.
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EAN: 9781137551542
UPC: 9781137551542
ISBN: 9781137551542
MPN: N/A
Book Title: The British Press and the Greek Crisis, 1943-1949:
Item Length: 21 cm
Item Height: 210 mm
Item Width: 148 mm
Series: Palgrave Studies in the History of the Media
Author: Gioula Koutsopanagou
Publication Name: The British Press and the Greek Crisis, 1943-1949: Orchestrating the Cold-War 'consensus' in Britain
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Subject: Government, History, Business
Publication Year: 2020
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 632 g
Number of Pages: 375 Pages