Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69

Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69

by James Schwoch
Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69

Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69

by James Schwoch

Paperback(1st Edition)

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Overview

James Schwoch presents a unique retelling of the Cold War period by examining the relationship of global television, diplomacy, and new electronic communications media. Beginning with the Allied occupation of Germany in 1946 and ending with the 1969 Apollo moon landing, this book explores major developments in global media, including the postwar absorption of the International Telecommunications Union into the United Nations and its impact on both television and international policy; the rise of psychological warfare and its relations to new electronic media of the 1950s; and the role of the Ford Foundation in shaping global communication research concepts.

Drawing on work in media studies, diplomatic history, and science and technology studies, Schwoch analyzes the way in which global media has been characterized, emphasizing a discursive shift away from a framework of east-west security and, by the 1960s, toward a framework of world citizenship and globalization. The global growth of television and other new electronic media occurred in conjunction with the ongoing tensions of the Cold War, as superpowers searched for ways to extend their influence beyond traditional borders of nation-states and into the extraterritorialities of planet Earth.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780252075698
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Publication date: 12/12/2008
Edition description: 1st Edition
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

James Schwoch is an associate professor of communication studies at Northwestern University and the coeditor, with Mimi White, of Questions of Method in Cultural Studies.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments   xi
Abbreviations   xiii

Introduction   1
PART 1: THE FIRST STRAND
1. "A Facet of East-West Problems"   17
2. "A Western Mind Would Consider This Kind of Spectacle as Stupid"   31
3. "The Key to Many of These Countries Is Not the Mud Hut Population"   43
4. "A Group of Angry Young Intellectuals"   61

PART 2: THE SECOND STRAND
5. "We Can Give the World a Vision of America"   79
6. "A Record of Some Kind in the History of International Communication"   94
7. "Something of That Sense of World Citizenship"   118
8. "A New Idea Capable of Uniting the Thoughts of People All Over the Earth"   139
Epilogue: "To Speak with a Single Voice Abroad"   157

Notes   175
Selected Bibliography   207
Index   213

Illustrations follow pages 76 and 138
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