Nazi Wireless Propaganda: Lord Haw-Haw and British Public Opinion in the Second World War

Author:   Martin A. Doherty
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9780748613632


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   27 January 2000
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Nazi Wireless Propaganda: Lord Haw-Haw and British Public Opinion in the Second World War


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Author:   Martin A. Doherty
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.357kg
ISBN:  

9780748613632


ISBN 10:   0748613633
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   27 January 2000
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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This is the first academic study of Nazi radio propaganda broadcast to Britain in the Second World War. Making good use of the available British sources, particularly the various sound archives, Mass Observation, the Public Record Office, the Imperial War Museum and the Wiener Library, Martin Doherty has made a careful and judicious assessment of the purpose, nature and impact of Nazi broadcasts to Britain during the Second World War. Most valuable is the provision of a compact disk insert providing twenty-four broadcasts, particularly from Radio Hamburg and William Joyce, although there are good examples of other broadcasters such as John Amery, Edward Bowlby and Norman Baillie-Stewart ... an excellent study of both the broadcasters and the reactions of the British state and public opinion to the impact of Nazi propaganda. Nazi Wireless Propaganda should interest both college students and general readers Is to be welcomed as an important step towards our understanding of the power of Nazi radio propaganda towards overseas targets ... the book provokes all sorts of questions and and marks a major advance in the study of Nazi propaganda ... There is an excellent CD included ... These are an invaluable resource: for the reader they bring the subject alive, for the teacher they will be a godsend in persuading students that radio really has mattered as a political force, even though - perhaps even because - it is invisible. Invisible A careful, chronologically structured analysis of Germany's English-language stations. He sets out to challenge multiple myths: that 'Haw-Haw' is reducible to Joyce alone, and that Joyce's contribution to wartime propaganda, in turn, is reducible to shrill histrionics to which Britons listened only to alleviate wartime tedium, finding humour in his laughably patrician efforts on behalf of the Nazis. Extensive quotation from the broadcasts is supplemented by an hour-long CD, with selections from twenty-four transmissions taken from different phases of the war. An invaluable teaching tool, the CD permits the distinctive accents, styles, registers (and sexes) of the hydra-headed 'Haw-Haw' to be fully appreciated in a way that transcription alone could never accomplish -- Susan Carruthers, University of Aberystwyth The International History Review This is the first academic study of Nazi radio propaganda broadcast to Britain in the Second World War. Making good use of the available British sources, particularly the various sound archives, Mass Observation, the Public Record Office, the Imperial War Museum and the Wiener Library, Martin Doherty has made a careful and judicious assessment of the purpose, nature and impact of Nazi broadcasts to Britain during the Second World War. Most valuable is the provision of a compact disk insert providing twenty-four broadcasts, particularly from Radio Hamburg and William Joyce, although there are good examples of other broadcasters such as John Amery, Edward Bowlby and Norman Baillie-Stewart ... an excellent study of both the broadcasters and the reactions of the British state and public opinion to the impact of Nazi propaganda. Nazi Wireless Propaganda should interest both college students and general readers Is to be welcomed as an important step towards our understanding of the power of Nazi radio propaganda towards overseas targets ... the book provokes all sorts of questions and and marks a major advance in the study of Nazi propaganda ... There is an excellent CD included ... These are an invaluable resource: for the reader they bring the subject alive, for the teacher they will be a godsend in persuading students that radio really has mattered as a political force, even though - perhaps even because - it is invisible. A careful, chronologically structured analysis of Germany's English-language stations. He sets out to challenge multiple myths: that 'Haw-Haw' is reducible to Joyce alone, and that Joyce's contribution to wartime propaganda, in turn, is reducible to shrill histrionics to which Britons listened only to alleviate wartime tedium, finding humour in his laughably patrician efforts on behalf of the Nazis. Extensive quotation from the broadcasts is supplemented by an hour-long CD, with selections from twenty-four transmissions taken from different phases of the war. An invaluable teaching tool, the CD permits the distinctive accents, styles, registers (and sexes) of the hydra-headed 'Haw-Haw' to be fully appreciated in a way that transcription alone could never accomplish


Author Information

Martin Doherty is lecturer in modern history at the University of Westminster in International Communications.

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