The Editors; The Contributors; List of Figures; Preface by Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Intelligence Studies Now and Then, Christopher R. Moran and Christopher J. Murphy; Part I: American Intelligence Historiography; 1. CIA History as a Cold War Battleground: The Forgotten First Wave of Agency Narratives, Richard J. Aldrich; 2. The Culture of Funding Culture: The CIA and the Congress for Cultural Freedom, Eric Pullin; 3. 'Real Substance, Not Just Symbolism'? The CIA and the Representation of Covert Operations in the Foreign Relations of the United States Series, Matthew Jones and Paul McGarr; 4. Bonum Ex Malo: The Value of Legacy of Ashes in Teaching CIA History, Nicholas Dujmovic; 5. Narrating Covert Action: The CIA, Historiography and the Cold War, Kaeten Mistry; 6. FBI Historiography: From Leader to Organisation, Melissa Graves; 7. Reconceiving Realism: Intelligence Historians and the Fact/Fiction Dichotomy, Simon Willmetts; 8. The Reality is Stranger than Fiction: Anglo-American Intelligence Cooperation from World War Two through the Cold War, Frederick P. Hitz; Part II: British Intelligence Historiography; 9. A Plain Tale of Pundits, Players and Professionals: The Historiography of the Great Game, Robert Johnson; 10. No Cloaks, No Daggers: The Historiography of British Military Intelligence, Jim Beach; 11. The Study of Interrogation: A Focus on Torture, But What About the Intelligence?, Samantha Newbery; 12. Whitehall, Intelligence and Official History: Editing SOE in France, Christopher J. Murphy; 13. A Tale of Torture? Alexander Scotland, The London Cage and Post-War British Secrecy, Daniel Lomas; 14. 1968 - 'A Year to Remember' for the Study of British Intelligence?, Adam D. M. Svendsen; 15. Their Trade is Treachery: A Retrospective, Chapman Pincher; 16. Intelligence and 'Official History', Christopher Baxter and Keith Jeffery; Index.