ABSTRACT

Integrating media studies with history, Media Tactics in the Long Twentieth Century explores the dynamic relationship between tactics and strategies in recent history.

Drawing on examples from a range of different countries and world regions, and looking at the infrastructures, entanglements, and institutions involved, the volume makes a strong case for media tactics as a new field of scholarly inquiry and for the importance of a historically informed approach. In contrast to strategic communication approaches, this media historical intervention contributes to new knowledge about the practical implementation of strategies. First foregrounding tactics as an object of study, the volume then counters the presentism of contemporary studies by adding a necessary historical perspective. Moreover, the book theoretically disentangles the concept of strategy – from an abstract contemporary buzzword to concrete, hands-on actions – which in turn reveals the complexity of using media strategies and media tactics in reality.

This volume will interest scholars and students working in the field of media and communication in general, and in the subfields of strategic communication, public relations, media history, and propaganda studies.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons [Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND)] 4.0 license.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

Title
Towards a History of Media Tactics
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part I|70 pages

Entanglements

Title

chapter 2|18 pages

Emigrant Colonialism and Transnational Communities

Title
Scandinavian Cultural Diplomacy through Nationals Abroad
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chapter 3|17 pages

Scientific Exchange As a Media Tactic

Title
Creating “Ever Smaller Worlds” through the Visit of Sir Lawrence Bragg to Sweden in 1943
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chapter 4|16 pages

Where Can You See Striking Workers?

Title
Communist Media Networks, Documentary Film and Regimes of (In)Visibility in the Early Cold War
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chapter 5|17 pages

Broadcasting Agency in the Portuguese Empire

Title
Disrupting the Dominant Discourse through Media Tactics
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part II|82 pages

Institutions

Title

chapter 6|15 pages

Supporting the Democratisation of Education and Anti-Colonialism in the Global South

Title
The World Student News and Soviet Bloc Media Tactics in the 1970s
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chapter 7|18 pages

The Paradox of Parliamentary Propaganda

Title
Parliamentarians' Individual Media Tactics versus Parliament's Institutional Media Strategy
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chapter 8|14 pages

Local Media Tactics

Title
Municipal Information, Audio-Visual Media and the Roots of City Branding in Gothenburg (1973)
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chapter 9|15 pages

Revisiting “The CIA and the Media”

Title
FOIA, Paperwork, and the Dialectic of (Media) Tactics and Strategies
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chapter 10|18 pages

The Information-by-Proxy Strategy

Title
Cultural Policy as a Media Tactic in Swedish Governmental Information
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part III|93 pages

Infrastructures

Title

chapter 11|17 pages

Measuring Media Tactics to Improve Propaganda Strategies

Title
The British Wartime Social Survey and “Publicity in Reverse”, 1941–1945
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chapter 12|16 pages

Window Tactics

Title
Entangled Visual Propaganda in Neutral Sweden, 1939–1945
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chapter 13|19 pages

Communications Infrastructures and Cold War Politics

Title
The Middle Eastern Theatre of the US/American Empire and Anti-American Coalitions
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chapter 14|19 pages

Working Their Cover

Title
The CIA's Forum World Features, Covert Propaganda Strategy, and News Tactics, 1966–1975
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chapter 15|17 pages

Propaganda → Counterinsurgency → Digital

Title
A Brief History of Prediction and the Present
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chapter |3 pages

Afterword

Title
Towards a Tactical Turn?
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