• Censorship and Propaganda

    Censorship and Propaganda


Censorship and propaganda have both regularly featured as topics within WPCC with a single issue dedicated to each as well as regular articles appearing in other contexts. Herman and Chomsky’s Propaganda Model was explored in an entire issue reconsidering its impact and provenance twenty years on. The PM model with its six filters is a reminder that overt censorship of press media may not be a prerequisite for political control of the media. This 2009 issue argued that the model had applications to Hollywood (Matthew Alford), financial media reporting (Peter. A. Thompson) and to the political economy of China (Jesse Hearns-Branaman). Nor was this issue the first reconsideration of the PM as an influential framework as board member Colin Sparks had published 'Extending and Refining the Propaganda Model' in WPCC in 2007. This tradition continued in book form (including several of the issue's contributors) with the University of Westminster Press's publication of The Propaganda Model Today in 2018 referring back to many of those WPCC issue articles and forward to new contexts for the PM to explore or be refined by.


Two countries that have proved particularly fruitful arenas for WPCC to explore themes of censorship and propaganda have been China and Zimbabwe – the former in the context of a move to liberal economics and the latter within the difficult struggle to be freed of a colonialist legacy noted in both domestic and international reporting of the African nation. In 2005 WPPC articles highlighted the shifting boundaries of political communication (Eric M Mazango), professionalism (Winston Mano) and independence (Dumisani Moyo) in the Zimbabwean Press. Other articles noted the rise of Zimbabwean 'patriotic journalism' (Terence Ranger) and the Western framing and particular imperial legacies embedded in British (Wendy Willems) and Norwegian (Nkosi Ndleda) reporting on the African nation. Within these articles it is possible also to detect the 'small accommodations of comfortable lives' (of journalists) and the 'veiled censorship' or self-censorship of which Professor Jean Seaton refers to in her interview about censorship and the legacy of George Orwell which neatly encapsulates some of the key themes of an entire WPCC issue devoted to 'Ambiguities of Censorship: An International Perspective' . Sue Curry Jansen here also reflected on the history of the concept of market censorship. Perspectives on censorship in this issue also consider contexts in Latin America (Guatemala, Cara Haberman), Africa (Ethiopia, Tere S. Skjerdal) whereas Iris Niedhardt suggested there may have been a 'new colonialism' surrounding film documentaries on the Middle East which – via the structures of funding imposed – struggled to shake off stereotypes about the Arab world and tell the continent's 'Untold Stories', thus 'filtering' the truth for Western audiences.


Concerning China WPPC articles have assessed the limits of local press autonomy (Haiyan Wang), the role of the CCP Central Propaganda Department (Anne-Marie Brady) and nationalistic news narratives (Peter C. Pugsley). With the advent and now dominance of social media, the focus for Chinese news has recently shifted to initiatives like the soft power of crafted and sophisticated digital media such as the 'Sixth Tone' (Vincent Ni) website and the handling of differences over foreign policy news conducted via Twitter (Joyce Y. M. Nip and Chao Sun) where the possibility of other actors operating covert propaganda via social media is not ruled out by their data. Sheng Zou in a WPCC issue that focuses on the globalisation of Chinese media notes that adaptation to local audiences adds another twist to the battle between party line and freer media practice whereas Paul Gardner in a review of Maria Repnikova's book 'Media Politics in China' argues prospects for critical journalism are receding faced with adaptation and compromise that might include censorship more much more uncompromising than in recent years.


A whole new set of automated mechanisms affecting news communication is highlighted by Critical Digital and Social Media Studies editorial board member Mark Andrejevic in a WPCC interview 'Rethinking Privacy and Freedom of Expression in the Digital Era' . As he indicates not only does the problem of accountability lie at the heart of historic concerns over censorship and propaganda but lack of transparent accountability is also a major concern in respect of the fast approaching 'total surveillance society' - which he suggests we shall all, soon, be living within.




Editorial


Editorial

Editorial

Katharina Nötzold

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 1-5

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Editorial

Editorial

Andrew Mullen

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 1-11

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Commentary


Is Shanghai’s Sixth Tone a New Model for China’s Overseas Propaganda?

Is Shanghai’s Sixth Tone a New Model for China’s Overseas Propaganda?

Vincent Ni

2018-06-01 Volume 13 • Issue 1 • 2018 • 37-40

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in China

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Rethinking Privacy and Freedom of Expression in the Digital Era: An Interview with Mark Andrejevic

Rethinking Privacy and Freedom of Expression in the Digital Era: An Interview with Mark Andrejevic

Pinelopi Troullinou

2017-10-31 Volume 12 • Issue 3 • 2017 • 72-77

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Censorship and Orwell’s Legacy Interview with Jean Seaton

Censorship and Orwell’s Legacy Interview with Jean Seaton

Benedetta Brevini

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 6-11

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Research Articles


China’s News Media Tweeting, Competing With US Sources

China’s News Media Tweeting, Competing With US Sources

Joyce Y. M. Nip and Chao Sun

2018-06-20 Volume 13 • Issue 1 • 2018 • 98-122

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in China

Collection: Journalism and the Digital Challenge

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Localisation between Negotiating Forces: A Case Study of a Chinese Radio Station in the United States

Localisation between Negotiating Forces: A Case Study of a Chinese Radio Station in the United States

Sheng Zou

2018-06-01 Volume 13 • Issue 1 • 2018 • 1-16

Also a part of:

Collection: Radio Studies

Collection: Media and Communication in China

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Untold Stories

Untold Stories

Irit Neidhardt

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 31-50

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Ambiguities and Imperatives of Market Censorship: The Brief History of a Critical Concept

Ambiguities and Imperatives of Market Censorship: The Brief History of a Critical Concept

Sue Jansen

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 12-30

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

The Full Repertoire: News and Press Management vs. Media Watchdog

The Full Repertoire: News and Press Management vs. Media Watchdog

Rui Novais

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 51-69

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Canadian Mines, Indigenous Communities and Accountability in Guatemala: What Role for the Media?

Canadian Mines, Indigenous Communities and Accountability in Guatemala: What Role for the Media?

Cara Haberman

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 70-97

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Justifying Self-censorship: A Perspective from Ethiopia

Justifying Self-censorship: A Perspective from Ethiopia

Terje Skjerdal

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 98-121

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in Africa

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Political Interference on the Airwaves: The BBC Broadcasts to Portugal during the Second World War

Political Interference on the Airwaves: The BBC Broadcasts to Portugal during the Second World War

Nelson Ribeiro

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 122-139

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

How Big Is the Cage? An Examination of Local Press Autonomy in China

How Big Is the Cage? An Examination of Local Press Autonomy in China

Haiyan Wang

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 1 • 2010 • 56-72

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in China

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

A Propaganda Model for Hollywood

A Propaganda Model for Hollywood

Matthew Alford

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 144-156

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

A Political Economy of News Media in the People’s Republic of China

A Political Economy of News Media in the People’s Republic of China

Jesse Hearns-Branaman

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 119-143

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in China

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Is it Either Or? Professional Ideology vs. Corporate-media Constraints

Is it Either Or? Professional Ideology vs. Corporate-media Constraints

Florian Zollmann

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 97-118

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Market Manipulation? Applying the Propaganda Model to Financial Media Reporting

Market Manipulation? Applying the Propaganda Model to Financial Media Reporting

Peter Thompson

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 73-96

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

‘Smooth Operator?’ The Propaganda Model and Moments of Crisis

‘Smooth Operator?’ The Propaganda Model and Moments of Crisis

Des Freedman

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 59-72

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

The Propaganda Model: Theoretical and Methodological Considerations

The Propaganda Model: Theoretical and Methodological Considerations

Jeffery Klaehn

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 43-58

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Manufacturing Consistency: Social Science, Rhetoric and Chomsky’s Critique

Manufacturing Consistency: Social Science, Rhetoric and Chomsky’s Critique

Alison Edgley

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 23-42

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

The Propaganda Model after 20 Years: Interview with Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky

The Propaganda Model after 20 Years: Interview with Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky

Andrew Mullen

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 12-22

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

The 1940 Soviet Coup-d’État in the Estonian Communist Press: Constructing History to Reshape Collective Memory

The 1940 Soviet Coup-d’État in the Estonian Communist Press: Constructing History to Reshape Collective Memory

Epp Lauk

2017-06-13 Volume 4 • Issue 4 • 2007 • 42-64

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Extending and Refining the Propaganda Model

Extending and Refining the Propaganda Model

Colin Sparks

2017-06-13 Volume 4 • Issue 2 • 2007 • 68-84

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Constructing the Hero: Nationalistic News Narratives in Contemporary China

Constructing the Hero: Nationalistic News Narratives in Contemporary China

Peter Pugsley

2017-06-13 Volume 3 • Issue 1 • 2006 • 78-93

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in China

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Guiding Hand: The Role of the CCP Central Propaganda Department in the Current Era

Guiding Hand: The Role of the CCP Central Propaganda Department in the Current Era

Anne-Marie Brady

2017-06-13 Volume 3 • Issue 1 • 2006 • 58-77

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

The ‘independent’ press and the fight for democracy in Zimbabwe: A critical analysis of the banned Daily News

The ‘independent’ press and the fight for democracy in Zimbabwe: A critical analysis of the banned Daily News

Dumisani Moyo

2017-06-13 Volume 2 • 2005 • 109-128

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in Africa

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Remnants of Empire? British media reporting on Zimbabwe

Remnants of Empire? British media reporting on Zimbabwe

Wendy Willems

2017-06-13 Volume 2 • 2005 • 91-108

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in Africa

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

The African Paradigm: The Coverage of the Zimbabwean Crisis in the Norwegian Media

The African Paradigm: The Coverage of the Zimbabwean Crisis in the Norwegian Media

Nkosi Ndlela

2017-06-13 Volume 2 • 2005 • 71-90

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in Africa

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Press Freedom, Professionalism and Proprietorship: Behind the Zimbabwean Media Divide

Press Freedom, Professionalism and Proprietorship: Behind the Zimbabwean Media Divide

Winston Mano

2017-06-13 Volume 2 • 2005 • 56-70

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in Africa

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Media games and shifting of spaces for political communication in Zimbabwe

Media games and shifting of spaces for political communication in Zimbabwe

Eric Mazango

2017-06-13 Volume 2 • 2005 • 33-55

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in Africa

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

The rise of patriotic journalism in Zimbabwe and its possible implications

The rise of patriotic journalism in Zimbabwe and its possible implications

Terence Ranger

2017-06-13 Volume 2 • 2005 • 8-17

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in Africa

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Book Reviews


Media Politics in China: Improvising Power under Authoritarianism by Maria Repnikova, (2017). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

Media Politics in China: Improvising Power under Authoritarianism by Maria Repnikova, (2017). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

Paul Gardner

2018-06-01 Volume 13 • Issue 1 • 2018 • 54-59

Also a part of:

Collection: Media and Communication in China

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Book Review: Anine Kierulf & Helge Rønning (ed.) (2009). Freedom of Speech Abridged? Cultural, Legal and Philosophical Challenges. Nordicom. ISBN 978-91-89471-76-4

Book Review: Anine Kierulf & Helge Rønning (ed.) (2009). Freedom of Speech Abridged? Cultural, Legal and Philosophical Challenges. Nordicom. ISBN 978-91-89471-76-4

Lawrie Hallett

2017-06-13 Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2010 • 140-142

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda

Book Review: David Edwards and David Cromwell – Media Lens Newspeak in the 21st Century Pluto Press, London, 2009, ISBN: 978-0-7453-2893-5

Book Review: David Edwards and David Cromwell – Media Lens Newspeak in the 21st Century Pluto Press, London, 2009, ISBN: 978-0-7453-2893-5

Lawrie Hallett

2017-06-13 Volume 6 • Issue 2 • 2009 • 157-160

Also a part of:

Collection: Censorship and Propaganda