Advanced Search
Print - Close Window
www.greenwood.com/catalog/C7383.aspx
All Greenwood Products
A Call to Arms Propaganda, Public Opinion, and Newspapers in the Great War
Book Code: C7383
ISBN: 0-275-97383-2
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-97383-4
224 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 12/30/2004
List Price: $95.00 (UK Sterling Price: £54.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Description: World War I highlighted the influence of newspapers in rousing and maintaining public support for the war effort. Discussions of the role of the press in the Great War have, to date, largely focused on atrocity stories. This book offers the first comparative analysis of how newspapers in Great Britain, France, Russia, Germany, and Austria-Hungary attempted to define war, its objectives, and the enemy. Presented country-by-country, expert essays examine, through use of translated articles from the contemporary press, how newspapers of different nations defined the war for their readership and the ideals they used to justify a war and support governments that some segments of the press had opposed just a few months earlier. During the opening months of the war, governments attempted to influence public opinion functioned in a largely negative fashion, for example, the censoring of military information or criticisms of government policies. There was little effort to provide a positive message to sway readers. As a result, newspapers had a relatively free hand in justifying the war and the reasons for their respective nation's involvement. Partisan politics was a staple of the pre-war press; thus, newspapers could and did define the war in terms that reflected their own political ideals and agenda. Conservative, liberal, and socialist newspapers all largely supported the war (the ones that did not were shut down immediately), but they did so for different reasons and hoped for different outcomes if their side was victorious.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: Newspapers, Public Opinion and Propaganda
  • A Clash of Cultures: The British Press and the Opening of the Great War by Adrian Gregory
  • "The Eagle Soars Over the Nightingale:" Press and Propaganda in France in the Opening Months of the Great War by Michael Nolan
  • The Russian Press and the 'Internal Peace' at the Beginning of World War I by Eric Lohr
  • German Propaganda: The Limits of Gerechtigkeit by Troy R.E. Paddock
  • The Empire Without Qualities: Austro-Hungarian Newspapers and the Outbreak of War in 1914 by Andrea Orzoff
  • Closing Observations on Newspapers, Propaganda and the Great War
LC Card Number: 2004023026
LCC Class: D639
Dewey Class: 940
All rights reserved. Copyright © 1999-2008 Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
88 Post Road West, Westport CT 06881, (203) 226-3571