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Reporting the Second World War
The Press and the People 1939-1945
Tim Luckhurst
- 264 páginas
- English
- ePUB (apto para móviles)
- Disponible en iOS y Android
Reporting the Second World War
The Press and the People 1939-1945
Tim Luckhurst
Información del libro
The decisive role of Britain's wartime newspaper journalism in shaping public opinion and government policy has been majorly overlooked. Much of the existing historiography has framed Britain's newspapers as mouthpieces of state propaganda, readily conforming to the wishes of the wartime coalition. Tim Luckhurst challenges this through an analysis of illuminating and largely forgotten controversies which underscore the function the press held as guardians of democracy and propagators of dissenting opinion in British politics and society - from the overseas evacuation of children to the Allies' carpet bombing of German cities. Reporting the Second World War is a timely and important intervention that duly recognises the place of national, regional and specialist titles in speaking truth to power in a democracy at war.
Preguntas frecuentes
Información
Índice
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 A Brief History of Newspapers
- 2 Barons, Abdication and Appeasement
- 3 The Phoney War
- 4 Churchill, Norway and Dunkirk
- 5 Class Unity and the Myth of the Blitz
- 6 The Battle of Britain
- 7 Air Raid Shelters, Fairness and a New Home Secretary
- 8 Morale, Intimidation and Censorship
- 9 Britain and Russia: ‘One Touch of Hitler Makes the Whole World Kin’
- 10 The Beveridge Report: Banishing Want from Cradle to Grave
- 11 Peculiar Problems: Reporting the Americans in Britain
- 12 ‘Bomb Back and Bomb Hard’: Allied Bombing of Germany
- 13 Concentration Camps
- 14 VE Day, General Election and Atomic Bombs
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Copyright