Cold War Broadcasting

Cold War Broadcasting

Impact on the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe

  • Auteur: Johnson, A. Ross; Parta, R. Eugene
  • Éditeur: Central European University Press
  • ISBN: 9786155211904
  • Lieu de publication:  Budapest , Hungary
  • Année de publication électronique: 2010
  • Mois : Août
  • Pages: 612
  • DDC: 384.540947/09045
  • Langue: Anglais
The book examines the role of Western broadcasting to the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe during the Cold War, with a focus on Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty. It includes chapters by radio veterans and by scholars who have conducted research on the subject in once-secret Soviet bloc archives and in Western records. It also contains a selection of translated documents from formerly secret Soviet and East European archives, most of them published here for the first time.
  • Front cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Table of Contents
  • Preface by the editors
  • Foreword by Timothy Garton Ash
  • Introduction by A. Ross Johnson
  • PART 1: GOALS OF THE BROAD CASTS
    • Chapter 1: RFE ’s Early Years: Evolution of Broadcast Policy and Evidence of Broadcast Impact
    • Chapter 2: Goals of Radio Liberty
    • Chapter 3: The Voice of America: A Brief Cold War History
  • PART 2: JAMMING AND AUDIENCES
    • Chapter 4: Cold War Radio Jamming
      • Appendix A: Types of Jamming
      • Appendix B: An Example of a Shortwave Broadcasting StationDuring the Cold War
    • Chapter 5: The Audience to Western Broadcasts to the USSRDuring the Cold War: An External Perspective
    • Chapter 6: The Foreign Radio Audience in the USSR Duringthe Cold War: An Internal Perspective
    • Chapter 7: The Audience to Western Broadcasts to Poland During the Cold War
      • Appendix C: Weekly Listening Rates for Major Western Broadcasters to Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Bulgaria and the USSR During the Cold War
  • Part 3: IMPACT OF WESTERN BROADCASTS IN EASTERN EUROPE
    • Chapter 8: Radio Free Europe in the Eyes of the Polish Communist Elite
    • Chapter 9: Polish Regime Countermeasures against Radio Free Europe
    • Chapter 10: Radio Free Europe’s Impact in Romania During the Cold War
    • Chapter 11: Ceauşescu’s War against Our Ears
    • Chapter 12: Just Noise? Impact of Radio Free Europe in Hungary
    • Chapter 13: Bulgarian Regime Countermeasures against Radio Free Europe
  • Part 4: IM PACT OF WESTERN BROADCASTS IN THE USSR
    • Chapter 14: Soviet Reactions to Foreign Broadcasting in the 1950s
    • Chapter 15: Foreign Media, the Soviet Western Frontier, and the Hungarian and Czechoslovak Crises
    • Chapter 16: Water Shaping the Rock: Cold War Broadcasting Impact in Latvia
  • Part 5: CONCLUSIONS
    • Chapter 17: Cold War International Broadcasting and the Roadto Democracy
  • Part 6: DOCUMENTS FROM EAST EUROPEAN ANDSO VIET AR CHIVES
    • I. Regime Perceptions of Western Broadcasters
      • Bulgaria
      • German Democratic Republic
      • Hungary
      • Romania
      • Poland
      • USSR
    • II . Regime Countermeasures against Western Broadcasters
      • Soviet Bloc
      • Bulgaria
      • Czechoslovakia
      • Hungary
      • Poland
      • USSR
  • Contributors
  • Glossary
  • Index
  • Back cover

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