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Silencing the Opposition: Antinuclear Movements and the Media in the Cold War

Contributor(s): Rojecki, Andrew (Author)

ISBN: 9780252068249

Publisher: University of Illinois Press

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Pub Date: October 6, 1999

Dewey: 070.44932717

LCCN: 99006180

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.61" H x 9.01" L x 6.02" W ( 0.72 lbs) 216 pages

Series: The History of Media and Communication

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Description:

We can trace many important strategic decisions to compelling official fictions such as Kennedy's "missile gap" and Reagan's "window of vulnerability." Over the years, antinuclear movements have had mixed success debunking these fictions, raising public consciousness, and reorienting government policy.

Andrew Rojecki explores links between nuclear arms policy and the visibility of opposition groups in the media. He pays particular interest to two cycles of protest: the test ban movement of the Eisenhower and the Kennedy administrations and the Reagan-era nuclear freeze movement. As Rojecki shows, space devoted to the opposition as well as the quality of the coverage varied widely from the first to the second period. The change reflected different climates of public opinion and foreign policy but also a subtle shift in political culture that undermined the legitimacy of citizen protest. As the rationalized policymaking of government agencies, think tanks, and university departments increasingly restricted public debate, the potential for citizens to influence nuclear politics became more circumscribed while nuclear weapons continued to proliferate.

Review Quotes: "The book will be required reading for all scholars who study social movements and media. Its findings add a great deal to our understanding of how the news constructs the political world."--Regina G. Lawrence

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