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Although often framed as an economic, military, and diplomatic confrontation, the Cold War was above all a conflict of ideas. In official pronouncements and publications as well as via radio broadcasts, television, and film, the United States and the Soviet Union both sought to extend their global reach as much through the power of persuasion as by the use of force. Yet of all the means each side employed to press its ideological case, none proved more reliable or successful than print. In this volume, scholars from a variety of disciplines explore the myriad ways print was used in the Cold War. Looking at materials ranging from textbooks and cookbooks to art catalogs, newspaper comics, and travel guides, they analyze not only the content of printed matter but also the material circumstances of its production, the people and institutions that disseminated it, and the audiences that consumed it. Among the topics discussed are the infiltration of book publishing by propagandists East and West; the distribution of pro-American printed matter in postwar Japan through libraries, schools, and consulates; and the collaboration of foundations, academia, and the government in the promotion of high culture as evidence of the superiority of Western values. At the same time, many of the qualities that made print the preferred medium of official propaganda also made it an effective instrument for challenging Cold War orthodoxies at home and abroad. Because printed materials were relatively easy to transport, to copy, and to share, they could just as well be used to bridge differences among people and cultures as to exploit them. They also provided a vehicle for disseminating satire and other expressions of dissent. In addition to the volume editors, contributors include Ed Brunner, Russell Cobb, Laura Jane Gifford, Patricia Hills, Christian Kanig, Scott Laderman, Amanda Laugesen, Martin Manning, Kristin Matthews, Hiromi Ochi, Amy Reddinger, and James Smith. Together their essays move beyond traditional Cold War narratives to gauge the role of a crucial cultural medium in the ideological battle between the superpowers and their surrogates.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page
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  1. Copyright Page
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  1. Table of Contents
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  1. Introduction
  2. pp. 1-28
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  1. Part I. Printing from Left to Right
  1. 1. The Medium, the Message, the Movement: Print Culture and New Left Politics
  2. pp. 31-49
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  1. 2. The Education of a Cold War Conservative: Anti-Communist Literature of the 1950s and 1960s
  2. pp. 50-68
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  1. Part II. Establishing a Beachhead
  1. 3. Literature and Reeducation in Occupied Germany, 1945– 1949
  2. pp. 71-88
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  1. 4. Democratic Bookshelf: American Libraries in Occupied Japan
  2. pp. 89-111
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  1. 5. The British Information Research Department and Cold War Propaganda Publishing
  2. pp. 112-125
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  1. 6. Books for the World: American Book Programs in the Developing World, 1948– 1968
  2. pp. 126-144
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  1. 7. Impact of Propaganda Materials in Free World Countries
  2. pp. 145-166
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  1. Part III. Print as a Tool to Shape Domestic Attitudes
  1. 8. “How Can I Tell My Grandchildren What I Did in the Cold War?”: Militarizing the Funny Pages and Milton Caniff ’s Steve Canyon
  2. pp. 169-192
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  1. 9. Pineapple Glaze and Backyard Luaus: Cold War Cookbooks and the Fiftieth State
  2. pp. 193-208
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  1. 10. Mediating Revolution: Travel Literature and the Vietnam War
  2. pp. 209-228
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  1. Part IV. The Cultural Cold War in the United States and Abroad
  1. 11. Promoting Literature in the Most Dangerous Area in the World: The Cold War, the Boom, and Mundo Nuevo
  2. pp. 231-250
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  1. 12. “Truth, Freedom, Perfection”: Alfred Barr’s What Is Modern Painting? as Cold War Rhetoric
  2. pp. 251-276
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  1. About the Contributors
  2. pp. 277-280
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 281-285
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  1. Back Cover
  2. p. 297
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