
War and the Media
Essays on News Reporting, Propaganda and Popular Culture
McFarland & Co Inc (Publisher)
Published on 30. September 2009
Book
Paperback/Softback
265 pages
978-0-7864-4607-0 (ISBN)
Description
Mass communication is used by governments to support their war efforts while media images are created or manipulated to inform, persuade or guide the consumers of those images. But this book looks beyond the obvious. The contributors examine historical and contemporary examples that reflect the role of the media or mass communication or both during wartime. The essays highlight the centrality of communication to the perpetuation and to the resolution of war, suggesting that the symbiotic relationship between communication and war is as important to understand as war itself.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Jefferson, NC
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Interest Age: From 18 years
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
notes, bibliography, index
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 16 mm
Weight
437 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7864-4607-0 (9780786446070)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Paul M. Haridakis is an associate professor at Kent State University. He lives in Akron, Ohio. Barbara Hugenberg is an assistant professor at Kent State University. She lives in Kent, Ohio. Stanley T. Wearden is dean of the College of Communication and Information at Kent State University. He lives in Kent, Ohio.
Content
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: The Impact of War on Communication Theory, Research, and the Field of Communication
The Editors
Part I: Images in Popular Culture
Protest Music as Alternative Media During the Vietnam War
Richard A. Lee
Created Heroes, Humanized Soldiers, and Superior Western Values: Fantasy Theme Analysis of Flags of Our Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima
Koji Fuse and James E. Mueller
Ghosts of Vietnam: Filmic Representations of Unconsummated American Heroism in the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century
Wesley J. O'Brien
Drawn-Out Battles: Exploring War-Related Messages in Animated Cartoons
Rekha Sharma
Part II: Institutional Propaganda Messages
Economic Convergence and the Celebration of Mass Production: The World War II Advertising Campaign to Sell Jeeps
Kathleen German
"You Boys and Girls Can Be the Minute Men of Today": Narrative Possibility and Normative Appeal in the U.S. Treasury's 1942 War Victory Comics
James J. Kimble and Trischa Goodnow
Inspecting the Rhetorical Arsenal: The War Frame in Nazi Germany's der Kampf and America's War on Terror
Roy Schwartzman
An Enduring Legacy of World War I: Propaganda, Journalism and the Domestic Struggle over the Commodification of Truth
Burton St. John III
Part III: Effects of News Coverage
Coverage of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars in Business Magazines: The Profit and Economy of U.S. War and Policy
Karen Rohrbauck Stout
"New Mexico's Always Been Patriotic and Loyal to the Country": Uncritical Journalistic Patriotism in Wartime
David Weiss
Embedded Reporting and Audience Response: Parasocial Interaction and Perceived Realism in Embedded Reporting from the Iraq War on Television News
M. F. Casper and Jeffrey T. Child
Prince Harry and the Afghanistan Media Blackout
Terri Toles Patkin
Part IV: Future
Cyberwar: The Future of War?
Brett Lunceford
About the Contributors
Index
Preface
Introduction: The Impact of War on Communication Theory, Research, and the Field of Communication
The Editors
Part I: Images in Popular Culture
Protest Music as Alternative Media During the Vietnam War
Richard A. Lee
Created Heroes, Humanized Soldiers, and Superior Western Values: Fantasy Theme Analysis of Flags of Our Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima
Koji Fuse and James E. Mueller
Ghosts of Vietnam: Filmic Representations of Unconsummated American Heroism in the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century
Wesley J. O'Brien
Drawn-Out Battles: Exploring War-Related Messages in Animated Cartoons
Rekha Sharma
Part II: Institutional Propaganda Messages
Economic Convergence and the Celebration of Mass Production: The World War II Advertising Campaign to Sell Jeeps
Kathleen German
"You Boys and Girls Can Be the Minute Men of Today": Narrative Possibility and Normative Appeal in the U.S. Treasury's 1942 War Victory Comics
James J. Kimble and Trischa Goodnow
Inspecting the Rhetorical Arsenal: The War Frame in Nazi Germany's der Kampf and America's War on Terror
Roy Schwartzman
An Enduring Legacy of World War I: Propaganda, Journalism and the Domestic Struggle over the Commodification of Truth
Burton St. John III
Part III: Effects of News Coverage
Coverage of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars in Business Magazines: The Profit and Economy of U.S. War and Policy
Karen Rohrbauck Stout
"New Mexico's Always Been Patriotic and Loyal to the Country": Uncritical Journalistic Patriotism in Wartime
David Weiss
Embedded Reporting and Audience Response: Parasocial Interaction and Perceived Realism in Embedded Reporting from the Iraq War on Television News
M. F. Casper and Jeffrey T. Child
Prince Harry and the Afghanistan Media Blackout
Terri Toles Patkin
Part IV: Future
Cyberwar: The Future of War?
Brett Lunceford
About the Contributors
Index