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Cold War Correspondents: Soviet and American Reporters on the Ideological Frontlines

Soviet and American Reporters on the Ideological Frontlines

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Fainberg, Dina (Author)
Title Statement: Dina Fainberg is an assistant professor of modern history at City University of London. She is the c...
published:
John Hopkins University Press 2021
Media Type: Book, E-Book

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further information
Physical Description:376; 31 Illustrationen, 28 halftones, 3 line drawings, Baltimore; 165 x 231 x 33
ISBN: 9781421438443
Subjects:
Amerikanische Geschichte
Collection:PDA Print VUB
Table of Contents
Summary:

In an age of mutual acrimony and closed borders, journalists were among the few individuals who crossed the Iron Curtain. Their reporting strongly influenced the ways that policy makers, pundits, and ordinary people came to understand the American or the Soviet "other." In Cold War Correspondents, Dina Fainberg examines how Soviet and American journalists covered the rival superpower and how two distinctive sets of truth systems, professional practices, and political cultures shaped international reporting. -- -- Fainberg explores private and public interactions among multiple groups that shaped coverage of the Cold War adversary, including journalists and their sources, editors, news media executives, government officials, diplomats, American pundits, Soviet censors, and audiences on both sides. Foreign correspondents, Fainberg argues, were keen analytical observers who aspired to understand their host country and probe its depths. At the same time, they were fundamentally shaped by their cultural and institutional backgrounds—to the point that their views of the rival superpower were refracted through values of their own culture. International reporting grounded and personalized the differences between the two nations, describing the other side in readily recognizable, self-referential terms. -- -- Fundamentally, Fainberg demonstrates, Americans and Soviets during the Cold War came to understand themselves through the creation of images of each other. Drawing on interviews with veteran journalists and Soviet dissidents, Cold War Correspondents also uses previously unexamined Soviet and US government records, newspaper and news agency archives, rare Soviet cartoons, and individual correspondents' personal papers, letters, diaries, books, and articles. Striking black-and-white photos depict foreign correspondents in action. Taken together, these sources illuminate a rich history of private and professional lives at the heart of the superpower conflict. --

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