Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Barriers Down : How American Power and Free-Flow Policies Shaped Global Media - Diana Lemberg

Barriers Down

How American Power and Free-Flow Policies Shaped Global Media

By: Diana Lemberg

eBook | 10 September 2019

At a Glance

eBook


RRP $54.00

$48.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $12.25 with

 or 

Instant Digital Delivery to your Kobo Reader App

Freedom of information is a principle commonly associated with the United States' First Amendment traditions or digital-era technology boosters. Barriers Down reveals its unexpected origins in political, economic, and cultural battles over analog media in the mid-twentieth century. Diana Lemberg traces how the United States shaped media around the world after 1945 under the banner of the "free flow of information," showing how the push for global media access acted as a vehicle for American power.

Barriers Down considers debates over civil liberties and censorship in Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, and elsewhere alongside Americans' efforts to circumvent foreign regulatory systems in the quest to expand markets and bring their ideas to new publics. Lemberg shows how in the decades following the Second World War American free-flow policies reshaped the world's information landscape, though not always as intended. Through burgeoning information diplomacy and development aid, Washington diffused new media ranging from television and satellite broadcasting to global English. But these actions also spurred overseas actors to articulate alternative understandings of information freedom and of how information flows might be regulated. Bridging the historiographies of the United States in the world, human rights, decolonization and development, and media and technology, Barriers Down excavates the analog roots of digital-age debates over the politics and ethics of transnational information flows.

Industry Reviews
In the 1940s and 1950s, the "free flow of information" became an American watchword. But this "flow" was neither free nor flowing nor even necessarily informational. Historian Diana Lemberg presents a critical biography of the famous phrase, whose leading advocates assumed information would move from the United States to the rest of the world and not the other way around. Barriers Down recovers long forgotten debates that are more relevant than ever.
on

More in Information Technology Industries

C-Scape : Conquer the Forces Changing Business Today - Larry Kramer

eBOOK

Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television - Jerry Mander

eBOOK