The Birth of Psychological War
Propaganda, Espionage, and Military Violence from WWII to the Vietnam War
Abstract
In the current climate of concern over disinformation and the so-called ‘post-truth era,’ psychological warfare has returned to discussions of national and international politics. Yet questions concerning psychological warfare — when, where, and how it came about — are poorly understood. This monograph reveals the complexity of these questions by investigating the historical-geographical contexts in which psychological warfare emerged. Identifying the home front and the foreign theatre as its key contexts, this monograph traces psychological warfare’s trajectory from the Second World War, to the ‘Cold War of ideas’ in Europe, to the counterinsurgency campaigns of the Vietnam war. While psychological warfare often claims to make war more humane, this book shows that in practice it has expanded the scale and scope of military violence. Despite psychological warfare’s perennial failures to ‘win hearts and minds’ abroad, this monograph shows that its influence nevertheless continues to transform the practice and meaning of contemporary warfighting and international relations.
Keywords
Psychological Warfare, Political Geography, International Relations, Propaganda, International Communication, Warfare, Critical Military Studies, Cold War, World War II, Vietnam War, CounterinsurgencyDOI
10.5871/bacad/9780197267493.001.0001ISBN
9780197267493, 978091995668, 9780198890027Publisher
Oxford University PressPublisher website
https://0-global-oup-com.catalogue.libraries.london.ac.uk/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2023Grantor
Series
British Academy Monographs,Classification
Social and political philosophy
Geopolitics
Political geography
20th century, c 1900 to c 1999
21st century, c 2000 to c 2100
United States of America, USA