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The Propaganda of Peace

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When political opponents Ian Paisley and Martin McGuiness were confirmed as First Minister and Deputy First Minister of a new Northern Ireland executive in May 2007, a chapter was closed on Norther...
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  • 15 August 2010
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When political opponents Ian Paisley and Martin McGuiness were confirmed as First Minister and Deputy First Minister of a new Northern Ireland executive in May 2007, a chapter was closed on Northern Ireland’s troubled past. A dramatic realignment of politics had brought these irreconcilable enemies together – and the media played a significant role in persuading the public to accept this startling change. The Propaganda of Peace places their role in a wider cultural context and examines a broad range of factual and fictional representations, from journalism and public museum exhibitions to film, television drama and situation comedy. The authors propose a radically different theoretical and methodological approach to the media’s role in reporting and representing. They ask whether the ‘propaganda of peace’ actually promotes the abandonment of a politically engaged public sphere at the very moment when public debate about neo-liberalism, financial meltdown and social and economic inequality make it most necessary.

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Price: £28.95
Pages: 108
Publisher: Intellect Books
Imprint: Intellect Books
Publication Date: 15 August 2010
Trim Size: 9.00 X 7.00 in
ISBN: 9781841502724
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / European / General, European history, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Peace, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / General, Society and culture: general, Peace studies and conflict resolution, Media, entertainment, information and communication industries

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'well-documented, tightly reasoned and carefully crafted'

Theoretical and research context
 
Reporting the political settlement: The first draft of history
 
Public exhibitions, commemoration and history 
 
The changing image of paramilitaries in film and television
 
The media, the politics of peace and ‘ordinary people’
 
The media, the peace process and America’s ‘war on terror’
 
Discussion and analysis