Includes bibliographical references (pages [196]-217) and index.
Contents:
Introduction : playing fast and loose with words and worlds -- History matters : progressivism, muckraking and commercial propaganda -- The spectacular growth of global public relations -- Global firms and holding companies -- Language matters : framing and spinning -- Globalization and privatization of public affairs : nation branding -- Fighting fire with fire : PR, social movements and NGOs -- We are all in PR now. Is there a way out?
Summary:
Public relations is, by design, the least visible of the persuasive industries. It operates behind the scenes, encouraging us to consume, vote, believe, and behave in ways that keep economies moving and citizens from storming the citadels of power. In this important new book, Sue Curry Jansen explores the ways in which globalization and the digital revolution have substantially elevated the role of PR in management, marketing, governance, and international affiars. Since the best PR is invisible PR, it violates the norms of liberal democracy, which require trasnparency and accountability. Even when it serves benign purposes, Jansen argues, PR is a commercial enterprise that divorces communication from conviction and turns it into a mercenary venture. As a primary source of what now passes as news, PR influences much of what we know and how we know it. Stealth Communications will be an indispensable guide for students of media studies and public relations, as well as anyone interested in the radical transformation of PR and the democratization of public communication. -- from back cover.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.