ABSTRACT

Total Propaganda moves the study of propaganda out of the exclusive realm of world politics into the more inclusive study of popular culture, media, and politics. All the participatory functioning elements of the society are aspects of membership in the popular culture. Thus, the values of popular music, media, politics, debates over social issues, and even international trade become everyday propaganda to which everyone may relate.

To emphasize the necessity for new thinking about propaganda, Edelstein creates the concepts of the new propaganda and the old, and he devises a language of "uninyms" to convey their meanings more quickly. "Oldprop" is characteristic of mass cultures and utilizes totalitarian methods of conflict, hegemony, minimization, demonization, and exclusiveness to achieve its goals. By contrast, "newprop" is created by members of the popular culture to allow them to engage in accomodation, enhance the individual, and promote inclusiveness. Shifts in the old and the new propaganda are tracked across social issues such as race, religion, sexuality, gender, gun control, and the environment, as well as in fashion, politics, advertising, sports, media, and politics.

Central to the concept of total propaganda is that it is not simply additive; it is the product of new energies that are produced by the fusing of propaganda in such related forums as music, art, advertising, sports and politics. It is these synergies, and their production of new energies, that make total propaganda greater than the sum of its parts.

Edelstein concludes that the most important distinction that should be drawn between mass culture and popular culture is its text; i.e., its propaganda. In a popular culture, everyone creates and consumes propaganda; in a mass culture almost everyone consumes it but only a few create it. This formulation offers new ways to discuss power and ideology in media texts. As an example, where once the least informed and the least educated were the most subject to propaganda, now the most informed and most educated often are the first to create propaganda and the first to consume it.

part |59 pages

Framing Totalprop

chapter 1|10 pages

Totalprop

From Mass Culture to Popular Culture, The Old Propaganda and the New

chapter 2|9 pages

Definitionprop

Distinguishing the Old Propaganda From the New

chapter 3|8 pages

Languageprop

Inventing the Uninym

chapter 4|13 pages

Multiprop

Generation and Class

chapter 5|18 pages

Cyberprop

The Path to Totalprop

part |105 pages

Entertainmentprop

chapter 6|15 pages

Filmprop

Picturing the Generations

chapter 7|14 pages

Adprop

Appropriately Cool!

chapter 8|13 pages

Sitlifeprop

Flirting With Realities

chapter 9|12 pages

MTVprop

Inventively Newprop

chapter 10|12 pages

Rockprop

Alienation, Fame, and Liberation

chapter 11|13 pages

Rapprop

Telling it Like it is

chapter 12|10 pages

Sportsprop

Businessball and Heroes Great and Small

chapter 13|15 pages

Humorprop

Opiate of the Popular Culture

part |49 pages

Mediaprop

chapter 14|11 pages

Radio Talkprop

Using Oldprop for Fuel

chapter 15|12 pages

TVprop

From Talk to Infotainment

chapter 16|9 pages

Mediaprop

Shooting the TV Messenger

chapter 17|15 pages

Journalismprop

Searching for Nirvanas

part |55 pages

Socialprop

chapter 18|11 pages

Gayprop

One Foot In, One Out

chapter 19|11 pages

Genderprop

Women in Mid-Passage

chapter 20|18 pages

Trinityprop

Race, Abortion, and Religion

chapter 21|13 pages

Lobbyprop

The NRA and the Environment

part |62 pages

Tradeprop and Politicalprop

chapter 22|11 pages

Tradeprop

“Naftoids” and a Vision of GATT

chapter 23|10 pages

Asia-Bashing

A Cultural Oldprop

chapter 24|8 pages

Politicalprop

1992: Gridlock and Credibility

chapter 25|7 pages

Politicalprop

1994 and 1995: Restoring Presidentialprop

chapter 26|10 pages

The 1966 Campaign

Softprop and Hardprop

chapter 27|11 pages

Pollprop

Court of Last Resort

chapter 28|3 pages

Endprop

The Road Ahead