Includes bibliographical references (pages 176-202) and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Consumption, Discipline, and Democracy: The "New Magazines" and Reader's Digest -- Reading the DigestWriting the World -- Ambivalent Geography: Writing World Orders, 1922 to 1945 -- The Beginnings of Cold War -- The Jeopardy of Detente -- The "Second Cold War" -- Denying Imperial Decline at the End of the Cold War -- Appendix: Reader's Digest Readers: Demographic Profile, 1991.
0
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
By examining the changing ways in which Reader's Digest has explained America and its relation to the world, Sharp exposes the links that the magazine has forged between the individual reader and the destiny of the United States, particularly as this relates to the Soviet Union, the Cold War enemy whose character the Digest is often credited with helping to create. Not about the Soviet Union per se, or about the historical details of any other threat to the United States, this is a book about America and the changing roles that this central voice of American mass culture envisioned for the cou.
ACQUISITION INFORMATION NOTE
Source for Acquisition/Subscription Address
JSTOR
Source for Acquisition/Subscription Address
OverDrive, Inc.
Stock Number
22573/cttbqbk3
Stock Number
550BB291-2FE9-4461-9F95-D69E442C9727
OTHER EDITION IN ANOTHER MEDIUM
Title
Condensing the Cold War.
International Standard Book Number
0816634157
CORPORATE BODY NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Reader's Digest Association
TITLE USED AS SUBJECT
Reader's digest-- Influence.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Cold War-- Press coverage-- United States.
National characteristics, American-- History-- 20th century.
Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
Koude Oorlog.
National characteristics, American.
Perswezen.
POLITICAL SCIENCE-- International Relations-- General.